THE Olympic Games are in full swing – and you may have noticed EOR going for the medals.
It’s a name you will see plenty of times over the next fortnight, but what does it stand for?
Team EOR will be participating in their third Olympic Games[/caption]But she met her match in the opening fight against Kimia Alizadeh of the EOR team.
What's happening today at The Games?
WHAT TO WATCH TODAY...
THE PARIS 2024 Olympics started with a stunning Opening Ceremony – and now the Games really do begin.
SunSport brings you all the action taking place in the French capital on a thrilling first full day.
Josh Tarling and Anna Henderson are both in road cycling time trial action along the streets of Paris (from 1.30pm), leading today’s Brit medal hopes.
Michael Bargeron and Seonaid McIntosh team up in the 10m mixed shooting trying to win the first gold of the 2024 Games (10am).
In diving, 3m synchro pair Yasmin Harper and Scarlett Mew Jensen could medal (10am).
And Team GB expect a medal from their swimmers in both of the 4x100m freestyle relays (8.30pm).
While three-time Olympic gold medallist Adam Peaty begins his quest for 100m breaststroke glory (heat 10.30am, semi-final 8.15pm).
And Max Whitlock is eyeing a pommel horse medal for a fourth Games in a row as gymnastics qualifying gets underway (10am).
Click here for all the events taking place at Paris 2024 today.
Follow all the action as it unfolds with our Paris 2024 Olympics LIVE blog.
What does EOR mean?
EOR is an acronym of the French name ‘Equipe Olympique des Refugies’.
In English, this means Refugee Olympic Team.
The Refugee team were a proud introduction to the Rio 2016 Olympics, when they went under the acronym ROA (Team of Refugee Olympic Athletes).
It has allowed athletes from war torn countries such as Syria and South Sudan and political dissidents from other nations to fulfil their dreams of competing in the games.
IOC President Thomas Bach said in 2016: “By welcoming the team of Refugee Olympic Athletes to the Olympic Games Rio 2016, we want to send a message of hope for all refugees in our world.
“Having no national team to belong to, having no flag to march behind, having no national anthem to be played, these refugee athletes will be welcomed to the Olympic Games with the Olympic flag and with the Olympic Anthem.
“They will have a home together with all the other 11,000 athletes from 206 National Olympic Committees in the Olympic Village.”
Kimia Alizadeh stunned Jade Jones in Olympic Taekwondo[/caption]Most read in Sport
What country is Kimia Alizadeh from and why did she join the Refugee team?
Kimia Alizadeh was born in Iran in 1998.
In 2016, she made history by becoming the first Iranian woman ever to win a medal at the Olympic Games as she picked up the bronze in Women’s 57kg Taekwondo.
However, in 2020 she defected to Germany and criticised the Iranian government’s attitude towards women in an Instagram post, calling herself “one of the millions of oppressed women in Iran who [Iran’s rulers] have been playing with for years.”
She added: “They took me wherever they wanted. I wore whatever they said.
“Every sentence they ordered me to say, I repeated. Whenever they saw fit, they exploited me.
Alizadeh added that “credit always went to those in charge” and she “didn’t want to sit at the table of hypocrisy, lies, injustice and flattery” any longer, nor remain complicit with the regime’s “corruption and lies.”
Alizadeh had shown an interest in competing for Germany before ultimately joining the EOR team for the Tokyo games.
Who are the EOR athletes?
- Adnan Khankan – judo
- Alaa Maso – swimming
- Amir Ansari – road cycling
- Amir Rezanejad Hassanjani – canoe (slalom)
- Arab Sibghatullah – judo
- Cindy Ngamba – boxing
- Dina Pouryounes Langeroudi – taekwondo
- Dorian Keletela – athletics
- Dorsa Yavarivafa – badminton
- Eyeru Gebru – road cycling
- Farida Abaroge – athletics
- Farzad Mansouri – taekwondo
- Fernando Dayan Jorge Enriquez – canoe (sprint)
- Francisco Edilio Centeno Nieves – shooting
- Hadi Tiranvalipour – taekwondo
- Iman Mahdavi – wrestling
- Jamal Abdelmaji – athletics
- Jamal Valizadeh – wrestling (Greco-Roman)
- Kasra Mehdipournejad – taekwondo
- Luna Solomon – shooting
- Mahboubeh Barbari Yharfi – judo
- Manizha Talash – breaking
- Matin Balsini – swimming
- Mohammad Amin Alsalami – athletics
- Mohammad Rashnonezhad – judo
- Muna Dahouk – judo
- Musa Suliman – athletics
- Nigara Shaheen – judo
- Omid Ahmadisafa – boxing
- Perina Lokure Nakang – athletics
- Ramiro Mora – weightlifting
- Saeid Fazloula – canoe (sprint)
- Saman Soltani – canoe (sprint)
- Tachlowini Gabriyesos – athletics
- Yahya Al Ghotany – taekwondo
- Yekta Jamali Galeh – weightlifting