Sports·THE BUZZER

What to watch in Olympic sports this long weekend

CBC Sports' daily newsletter looks ahead to a busy Thanksgiving weekend of Olympic sports that includes a major marathon and Canadians competing in world championships.

Major marathon and Canadians in world championships are among the highlights

A large group of runners compete in a marathon.
Elite and recreational runners alike will be part of the sea of humanity at this weekend's Chicago Marathon. (Kamil Krzaczynski/AFP via Getty Images)

This is an excerpt from The Buzzer, which is CBC Sports' daily email newsletter. Stay up to speed on what's happening in sports by subscribing here.

First off, a quick heads-up: there will be no Buzzer tomorrow or next week. The reason for the hiatus is I'll be running the Chicago Marathon this weekend, then taking a few days off (while no doubt dealing with assorted aches and pains). The newsletter will be back in your inbox on Monday, Oct. 16.

If you're not familiar, Chicago is one of the six World Marathon Majors, along with Boston, New York City, London, Berlin and Tokyo. Chicago organizers say there will be more than 47,000 runners and well over a million spectators at the 45th edition of the race, which will celebrate its millionth finisher at some point on Sunday.

The elite athletes set to take on the downtown course include Kenya's Kelvin Kiptum, who ran the second-fastest marathon of all time this past April in London. Kiptum missed Eliud Kipchoge's world record of 2:01:09 by just 16 seconds, and there's a feeling that it'll soon belong to him. Kiptum is only 23 (very young for a marathoner) and he made his marathon debut just 10 months ago.

The top women competing Sunday include Sifan Hassan, the incredibly versatile Ethiopian-born Dutchwoman who in 2021 won Olympic track gold medals in the 5,000m and 10,000m while adding a bronze in the 1,500m. Hassan tried the marathon for the first time this year in London — and promptly won the major, despite stopping several times to stretch a sore hip. Her competition will include Kenya's Ruth Chepngetich, who's gunning for her third consecutive Chicago title after running a 2:14:18 last year — the third-fastest women's marathon of all time.

I expect to cross the finish line about an hour later than that. Last year, I qualified for Chicago with a 3:18:37 in my second marathon, getting under the 3:20:00 cutoff time for my age group (men 40-44). If I can lower that personal record while feeling good enough to take in all the sights and sounds of my first big-city race, I'll consider the day a complete success. Either way, it should be an unforgettable experience.

Alright, enough about some middle-aged recreational runner! Here are some other things to watch in the Olympic sports world through the Thanksgiving long weekend:

Gymnastics world championships

Yesterday in Belgium, Simone Biles led the United States to its record-breaking seventh consecutive world title in the women's team event. In the process, Biles earned her record-extending 20th world-championships gold and became, at 26, the oldest American woman ever to reach the podium at the gymnastics worlds.

It would appear Biles is fully back from her frightening bout of what's known as "the twisties" (a dangerous mental block where gymnasts become disoriented while performing moves up in the air), which ruined her Olympics in 2021 and caused her to take a break from the sport. And she's not done at the world championships: Biles had the best score in qualifying for the women's all-around final, which goes Friday. She also placed first in qualifying for the vault, balance beam and floor and fifth in the uneven bars. Those events will be decided this weekend.

Canada's Ellie Black, a silver medallist in the balance beam last year, made it to the women's all-around final with a fifth-place showing in qualifying and will also compete in the uneven bars final.

Today's men's all-around final, which was in progress at our publish time, included Canadian Rene Cournoyer. Canada's Felix Dolci qualified for the eight-man floor and high bar finals this weekend.

Olympic men's volleyball qualifier

The top two finishers at an eight-team global qualifying tournament in China get a spot in next summer's Paris Games. Canada (3-1) is in second place in the round-robin competition with three matches left. Those are against Bulgaria (2-2) tonight at 10 p.m. ET, Belgium (2-2) on Friday at 10 p.m. ET and Mexico (0-4) on Sunday at 4 a.m. ET.

The only team currently ahead of Canada is world No. 1 Poland (4-0), which the Canadians took to a deciding fifth set before losing by two points earlier this week.

Beach volleyball world championships

The top Canadians competing in Mexico are Melissa Humana-Paredes and Brandie Wilkerson, who are seeded fourth in the 48-team women's tournament. Sarah Pavan and Molly McBain are seeded 32nd, while Sam Schachter and Daniel Dearing are No. 36 in the men's event.

Group play begins Friday and the tournaments run through Oct. 15. The top two teams in each group advance to the 32-team knockout stage, along with eight of the best third-place teams.

Canadian long track speed skating championships

Canadians won five medals at the 2022 Olympics and seven at last season's world championships, including gold in the men's and women's team sprints and the women's team pursuit. Now they'll battle each other for national titles at the Canadian championships in Calgary, which started today and continue through Sunday.

The most decorated Canadian at last year's worlds was Ivanie Blondin, who was part of the team pursuit and team sprint golds and also took silver in the individual mass start. She competed in last week's Canadian short track championships in Montreal as part of her training and could possibly compete in both speed skating formats at the 2026 Winter Olympics in Italy.

How to watch: With the exception of the marathon, all of the events mentioned above are being streamed live on CBCSports.ca, the CBC Sports app and CBC Gem, with additional coverage of some events on the CBC TV network. See the full streaming and broadcast schedules here.

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