Team USA bobsledder Lolo Jones, one of the most uniquely gifted and transcendent female athletes of her generation, a Summer and Winter Olympian, has been suspended from using the training and sports medicine facilities at the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Training Center in Lake Placid, New York, for the past four months following a verbal confrontation with a USOPC sports medicine staff member after she was denied medical treatment at the center, according to USOPC to documents obtained by the Southern California News Group and confirmed by Jones.
Jones, 42, is contesting the previously undisclosed USOPC suspension, which runs through August 3 and denies her access to training facilities such as the center’s weight room, sports medicine clinic and personnel, and housing and nutritional resources at a critical training period, according to USOPC documents obtained by the SCNG and interviews with Jones and three other people familiar with the case. The suspension has created competitive, financial and emotional obstacles, Jones said, that jeopardize her bid to compete in a fourth Olympic Games next February in Milan-Cortina.
Jones’ suspension continues even though USOPC officials acknowledged she was wrongly denied medical treatment late on the afternoon of February 28, a decision that prompted the verbal confrontation. The USOPC did not interview eyewitnesses, according to Jones, a USA Bobsled and Skeleton official, and two other persons familiar with the case.
Jones, suffering severe pain and incontinence from a training-related back injury, was initially banned from the OPTC sports medicine area on March 1, a day after she called John Faltus, a top official at the USOPC Medical Clinic at the training center, “a horrible f—— human being,” during a verbal exchange after a previously scheduled treatment was canceled without explanation just days before the World Championships in Lake Placid, according to OPTC emails and interviews. Jones confirmed in an interview with SNCG that she swore at Faltus.
Faltus also alleges that Jones made an obscene gesture toward him, an allegation Jones denies.
“This behavior is a direct violation of the OPTC Code of Conduct,” Julie Marra, director of the USOPC Training Center in Lake Placid, wrote in a March 1 email to Jones. “This conduct is unacceptable, and I want to make it clear that such behavior cannot be tolerated.”
But Jones, other Olympians and a USA Bobsled and Skelton official describe her suspension as excessive, arbitrary, retaliatory and based on little if any investigation by USOPC officials.
“The punishment doesn’t fit the crime,” said a USABS official who asked not to be identified.
USOPC officials have “admitted fault” in denying medical treatment on February 28, according to Jones, a USABS official and two other people familiar with the case.
“We had a 30-minute mediation before Worlds where they made me cry,” Jones said. “They admitted that they messed up by not telling me my appointment was canceled and they said that they would change protocols in the future for athletes and at least give them proper time to make adjustments. I said, ‘If you’re admitting you did something wrong, then why are you punishing me and not your provider who did not contact me?’ They were speechless. They said that they were gonna uphold the ban.”
USOPC officials did not interview eyewitnesses to Jones’ exchange with Faltus, according to Jones, a USABS official and two other people familiar with the case.
“You would think you would get it from both sides,” Jones said. “You would get it from the (sports medicine) provider and you would get it from the athletes involved. Instead, what they did is they just took John’s word for it and gave me a life sentence of pretty much this is my last Olympic push.
“So if they can blackball me from having access, they’re putting me in the hole. And they know it. They know it.”
CODE OF CONDUCT QUESTIONS
Jones’ suspension also highlights a pattern of selective enforcement by USOPC officials and lack of specificity in the OPTC’s Code of Conduct, Jones, a USABS official and other Olympians said.
This past winter, a Team USA winter sport athlete screamed and cursed at a U.S. teammate at an international event, refusing to stop even after being warned by team officials and other teammates, according to two people familiar with the incident.
“The whole team said that it was embarrassing, a distraction to performance, and unacceptable,” said a U.S. Olympian.
Another Team USA winter sport athlete got into a public screaming match with a U.S. coach, according to two people familiar with the incident.
In neither case were the athletes disciplined, according to two people familiar with the situation.
While Marra, in informing Jones of her banishment, said her behavior violated the OPTC’s Code of Conduct, Marra did not cite a specific rule. The OPTC’s 10-page Code of Conduct does not refer to swearing or verbal altercations. Instead the code outlines how marijuana, marijuana paraphernalia and weapons including swords are not permitted in OPTC dorms or facilities, that food and drink are not to be taken in training areas, where to store bikes and that “Visitors/unregistered guests are prohibited in the dormitory areas or on the premises between 11:00 PM and 7:00 AM daily.”
The closest the code comes to directly addressing swearing or verbal altercations is one brief passage: “Unacceptable behavior will not be tolerated, including but not limited to, the following: Any act of violation of offenses, as listed in the USOPC Background Check Policy or adjudicated of federal, state, or local laws.”
The OPTC code, the USABS official acknowledged, “is arbitrary.”
“To this day,” Jones wrote in an email to SCNG, “no one has told me: Who found me in violation, what exact rule or code I broke, or what part of the Code of Conduct was allegedly violated.
“They vaguely referred to ‘professionalism’ and a generic code of conduct, but never pointed to a rule in our athlete handbook or safety policies. No one would name who made the decision. The information kept changing. I was never given a formal hearing, never asked for my side, and no witnesses were interviewed. I was banned like a criminal without due process.”
Jones alleged in an interview with SCNG that Faltus also denied her access to treatment last fall shortly after she returned to bobsled and after she had competed in the Olympic Trials in the 100-meter hurdles.
“John denied me treatment and getting ice bags,” Jones said. “I couldn’t even do hot and cold tub. I could not get into the training room to do hot and cold tub. And I am a three-time Olympian.”
Jones also alleges that Faltus has banned a female Olympic medalist from the OPTC training room.
“He runs the Olympic training room like TSA,” Jones said. “It’s a power trip for him. In my opinion, he’s not trying to help the athletes. It’s more so like, this is your allotment, and be happy with it. ‘You ungrateful children.’ And a lot of people forget, I’m actually older than John. I am. I am older than him. I am older than the head coach. If you treat me like a child, and I am actually your senior, there needs to be respect both ways. And I think that there’s this perception when the athletes come in, because we do come in on our 20s, that we’re kids, and they keep that perception of us, and we should be grateful, and we should bow down and cater to them. It should be a cohesive system where we are helping each other. You’re helping our bodies, and we’re helping Team USA to get on the podium and get medals for our country. Like we win together, not separate.”
Marra did not respond to multiple messages seeking comment. A person identifying himself as “John” answered a telephone number listed for Faltus’ office earlier this week. When an SCNG reporter identified himself and said he was working on a story about Jones, the person answering the phone hung up without explanation. Faltus did not respond to subsequent messages seeking comment.
Jones has been open about her mental health struggles and a troubled childhood in which her father was in state prison for much of her upbringing, her family experienced homelessness and poverty to such an extent that older family members encouraged Jones as young girl to shoplift frozen dinners so they could eat.
She was diagnosed with PTSD in 2009, months after leading the 2008 Olympic Games 100-meter hurdles final, before crashing after hitting the ninth of 10 hurdles, slipping to seventh place. Jones has also talked extensively about struggling with suicidal thoughts and depression.
“I think the thing that’s the most frustrating of all this is I have expressed how I’ve had PTSD from this sport,” Jones said. “I’ve been concussed multiple times, you know, I’ve told them how I’ve struggled with depression and to be kicked out like a dog, it’s just, it’s wild to me. It has really affected me in ways I didn’t think could affect me.”
Jones’ background, her injury and the stress of the upcoming World Championships should have been taken into consideration by USOPC officials in disciplining her for her confrontation with Faltus, Jones’ supporters said.
“What concerns me most is that the USOPC and staff are well aware of Lolo’s mental health challenges,” said Katie Uhlaender, a five-time Olympian and two-time world champion in skeleton for Team USA who trains at the OPTC. “This could have been an opportunity to support her — not excuse her behavior, but respond in a way that prioritizes holistic care and helps her get better. Instead, it feels like a missed chance to lead with compassion and accountability.”
A USABS official agreed.
“We need to figure out how to provide athletes with resources that not only support their performance but their mental health,” the official said. “And that’s still lacking at the moment.”
Said Jones, “It’s such a power trip at this point. You know it’s like if they can do this to me, someone who has stats, imagine the lower athlete that comes in and has no stats, no power to do anything, like they’re just gonna get destroyed in the sport, 100 percent destroyed.”
SUSPENSION REMAINS IN PLACE
Jones’ access to the OPTC was also revoked as of March 17, Marra wrote in the March 1 email.
During a March 7 meeting in which Jones apologized, Marra agreed to a modified plan in which Jones could “receive medical treatment this week/during World Championships,” March 6-15, according to emails. Jones and Team USA pilot Elana Meyers Taylor finished sixth at the World Championships. Faltus did not attend or participate in the meeting despite being invited.
But the suspension has remained in place. Jones has missed spring training as well as a June Team USA camp with an upcoming camp at the OPTC now also in jeopardy, according to Jones and emails.
“You may have already heard from your lawyer but I heard back from the USOPC yesterday,” Fogt wrote in a June 14 email to Jones. “For this camp in June, they are sticking with the original punishment of no OPTC access or resources during this camp. This includes not being able to see (OPTC trainer) Ben (Towne), or any USOPC providers, even while at the ice house.
“I know this isn’t the information you wanted to hear and am not sure the impact it will have on your decision to attend the performance camp or not. I wanted to make sure we were all on the same page before you made that decision. I’ll continue to talk to the USOPC and advocate for a resolution before the next performance camp in July.”
If Jones wants to attend the July camp, she has to provide and pay for her transportation to Lake Placid and for a rental car once she gets there. She must find housing in the arena because she is banned from staying in the OPTC dorms. She will not have access to sports medicine personnel or facilities or any nutritional support.
“I have nowhere to get treatment,” she said. “I have nowhere to lift weights. They want me to lift weights in a public gym. Coming off of a spinal surgery. I have no spotter in a public gym. I don’t have rehab capabilities. I’m supposed to be doing ice, contrast, stem, you know, someone watching my rehab protocols. I have no access.
“And you know, the craziest thing about all of this is they said, ‘Oh, she can come in for the team meetings, but she’s a threat.’ They said, ‘Okay, she can’t come in the OTC because she’s a threat.’ But then the coach was like, well, we have team camps. Okay, she can come in for the team meetings. If I am a threat, how can I come in for the team meetings and I can’t go into the weight room, which is right next to the team meeting room? Literally, they are side by side. If I am such a threat? What they’re doing is they’re picking the things that will hurt me the most. They know if I can’t lift weights, it drastically decreases my chance to make the Olympic team.”
Lolo Jones reacts after competing in the first round of the women’s 100 meter hurdles at the 2024 U.S. Olympic Team Track & Field Trials at Hayward Field on June 28, 2024 in Eugene, Oregon. (Photo by Patrick Smith/Getty Images)“WHAT IS GOING ON?”
Jones was in severe pain and a heightened sense of anxiety when she walked into the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee Medical Clinic in Lake Placid, New York, shortly before 4 p.m. on February 28 for a previously scheduled treatment session.
It had been a roller coaster of a week for Jones, one of the most recognizable American female athletes this century, a two-time world champion in both the hurdles in track and field and bobsled, whose athletic success has been a springboard to being cast in several reality TV series and achieving a celebrity status rarely obtained by even more decorated Olympic athletes.
The week was, in a way, the start of Jones’ push to make one last Olympic team.
After winning three NCAA titles as a hurdler at LSU, Jones won the 2008 and 2010 World Indoor Championships 60-meter hurdles gold medals. She was the heavy favorite to also capture gold in the 100-meter hurdles at the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing, only to crash after pulling away from the field.
“You hit a hurdle about twice a year where it affects your race,” she told reporters after the race. “It’s just a shame that it happened on the biggest race of my life.”
Jones was fourth in the 100 hurdles at the 2012 Olympic Games in London before switching to bobsled, winning the mixed team gold medal at the 2013 World Championships. A year later, she was in the two-woman competition at the 2014 Olympic Games in Sochi. She teamed with Kaillie Humphries to win the two-woman gold medal at the 2021 Worlds.
That Wednesday in February, Jones was the fastest brakeman in an in-house national team competition and evaluations at the OPTC and had been named to Team USA’s top sled for the World Championships the following week in Lake Placid.
“The day of the evals was an excellent day for me,” Jones said. “That’s so there’s no higher standard test in USA bobsled for the brakeman than evals to determine who’s the best. So on that day, I won, determining I was the fastest brakeman in America. I was put on the USA 1 sled, which means I was put on the fastest sled. They put the fastest brakeman with the best pilot to increase the best chance for medals at Worlds.”
But while testing the following day, with a new sled that the U.S. would use in the Olympic Games in Milan-Cortina this next February, Jones suffered a back injury so severe that she lost control of her bladder in the sled during a test run.
“I was having a lot of pain and I also peed in the bobsled,” Jones said. “I lost continence that I did not tell the pilot, because I was embarrassed, because my job as a brakeman is to reassure the pilot, and if I would have told her, I lost like body fluid, she would have been stressed out for worlds. So I just basically downplayed it with her.
“Basically bobsleds are like cars. We’re building new cars every Olympic quad to make them faster and faster. So we have to try out things. That’s the nature of our job. But this, this injury, was incurred while doing bobsled for the United States of America. To give you the United States a better medal chance.”
The timing couldn’t have been worse. Not only was Team USA desperate for a Worlds medal on home soil, but a poor performance by Jones at Worlds could have a major negative financial impact on her going into the Olympic year.
“World Championships, a lot of people think of Olympic athletes as like, ‘Oh, they’re doing it for fun,’” Jones said. “Well, our health insurance is on the line. So if you don’t compete well at World Championships, your health insurance gets cut. Your stipend to pay your rent for the whole year gets cut. So it’s our job. Like, if you don’t compete well at these championships, your finances take a hit for the next 12 months. So this is not only a health thing, it’s like, ‘Oh my gosh, if I don’t get right, I can’t compete, and my budget is going to be severely impacted.’”
Towne, the OPTC trainer, set up an appointment with the sports medicine clinic for Jones to receive a massage, the first step in treating and diagnosing the back injury, according OPTC protocol.
“Okay, so he cleared it,” Jones said. “He suggested it, cleared and approved this massage.”
But Jones was informed after arriving at the clinic that her appointment had been canceled without explanation.
“So I did the protocol,” Jones said. “I spoke with the athletic trainer. The trainer approved it. So then when I go to show up on my massage that, they schedule me for me for Friday at 4 (p.m.), right before the training center closes for the weekend.
“I show up to Sports Med, they tell me my appointment was canceled. I asked them, ‘Why is my appointment canceled? This is the last chance I have to get treatment before the weekend ends. I’m in severe pain. I’ve peed myself in a bobsled. You’re basically denying me treatment before the sports meds office is closed for the weekend, which means I will have no access for the next two days pain pain-wise, to figure out what’s wrong with me?’”
The secretary told Jones she was not sure why the appointment was canceled.
“I said, ‘Why wasn’t I warned?’” Jones said. “‘Why wasn’t I sent an email? Why wasn’t I sent a text so that I could make my own adjustments.’ So we did the evals the next day we were on ice. It took like a day to get the treatment. So they had a day at least to warn me, ‘Hey, your appointment is being canceled, make other procedures for the weekend.’ They sat on this for a day, and did not even let me know why it was canceled all. It’s a simple text message, and I could make other, you know, adjustments, but they waited until 4 p.m. before the (clinic) closes.
“So I get frustrated, as I should, as anyone with severe back pain would like, ‘Why did you cancel my appointment? What is going on? And so she said, ‘John, canceled it.’ John Faltus. And so he comes out, and (I ask) ‘Why was my appointment canceled?’ And I was just like, I’m frustrated. I’m in pain. I’m in severe back pain. I’m stressed out, because I’m like, how am I going to get treatment for the next two days by myself? I have World Championships in seven days.
“So he came out, and I was just like, ‘You’re a horrible f—— human. How could you do this to me?’ And then I walked out, that was it, that’s what I said. I mean, I was so frustrated with him because, like, why wasn’t I notified?”
Although Jones was told Faltus canceled the treatment because she was only entitled to one massage per week and she had already had a massage that week, she said “I have never received a written explanation for why I was denied medical treatment? This is especially alarming given that I was recovering from an injury I sustained while representing Team USA. The USOPC claims to support athlete health, but in this case, they failed to uphold that duty of care.”
Faltus graduated with a bachelor’s degree in rehabilitation science from Northeastern University in Boston in 2007 and received a doctorate in physical therapy from the school in 2008, according to published reports. He earned a master’s degree in athletic training from Tennessee-Chattanooga in 2011. Faltus worked as an assistant trainer for the NBA’s Memphis Grizzlies in 2014 and volunteered at the USOPC sports medicine clinic at the Olympic Training Center in Colorado Springs in 2012 and 2014. He was head trainer in 2018 and 2020 on Cirque du Soleil tours in Japan and North America. He was a member of the USOPC’s sports medicine team at the 2024 Olympic Games in Paris.
Jones paid to have an MRI done after the World Championships, which revealed a herniated disc with a disc bulge, and tears in her L3, L4 and L5 vertebrae with spinal fluid leaking out.
“Meaning, had I competed, had my pilot crashed me at World Championships, I could have been paralyzed,” Jones said. “Had she made an error, I would not be walking today. Thank god. She’s a great driver, and we got through the rounds, but they put me at severe risk to injury. Why? Because I told the provider, you’re a horrible f—— human being for canceling my appointment because I was in pain.”
Jones later underwent a procedure to repair the injuries. The procedure that cost her approximately $22,000 out of her own savings, she said.
ACKNOWLEDGING HER MISTAKE
The morning after Jones’ run-in with Faltus, Marra informed her she had been banned in a 9:33 a.m. email.
“I had no access of Sports Med during World Championships,” Jones said. “I was carrying ice bags to my room while competing for Team USA. I was in my room trying to do my own cupping on my back. Do you know how hard that is on your own back?”
Later that afternoon, a USA Bobsled and Skeleton athlete representative reached out to the USOPC’s athlete ombudsman’s team.
“Lolo acknowledges her mistake, is deeply apologetic, and is committed to making amends,” the representative wrote. “She stated that the team is spread very thin, and the pressure of world championships has been intense.
“She is willing to accept appropriate consequences and engage in safe sports training or some other form of work as needed, decided by the parties involved. The current revocation leading up to Olympic selections would seriously inhibit her ability to make a team.
“We would greatly appreciate your assistance in mediating with the Training Center staff to work out a way to potentially restore her access in a way that may not impede on her ability to make an Olympic team.”
But it was clear the combination of the injury, the suspension, the lack of access to treatment and the pressure of the upcoming Worlds were taking their toll on Jones.
“She seemed quite stressed yesterday and may not have had the capacity to do so at the time,” a USABS athlete representative wrote in a March 3 email to Aaron Mojarras, USOPC assistant athlete ombudsman. A day later, Jones admitted in an email to Mojarras “the stress is overwhelming.”
“There’s a certain state of mind required to compete on the world stage, with immense pressure and expectations placed on athletes,” Uhlaender said. “For some of us, our livelihoods are on the line. Competing while injured can feel like facing an impossible situation — and the worst part is feeling like you’re facing it alone. There is some support, but when key players in your support system pull critical resources, it can make everything worse.
“Especially when it’s the end of a career and the future after sport already feels uncertain, the last thing a multi-time Olympian should feel is dismissed or ignored. I’m sure that’s how Lolo felt. I do wonder if more compassion could have been given or a punishment that included the recognition of what she’s been through up to now.”
There were, however, encouraging signs.
“The head coach is also eager to provide support and would like to be involved in the conversation when you connect,” the athlete rep wrote to Mojarras in the March 5 email. ” … Additionally, it seems that the management at the OPTC is open to negotiation on this matter. However, the only person who has not been willing to engage in discussions is John (Faltus), the head trainer at the OPTC.
“The inability to provide treatment not only hurts Lolo, it’s also a hindrance to the Pilot she is attached to.”
Fogt, the USABS head coach, was also upbeat in a March 5 email to the athlete rep.
“This is great news!” Fogt wrote. “Please let me know if I can help or if they want to hop on a call with Julie and I.
“Lolo is ready to apologize, accept the consequences, and move on from the incident. She fully acknowledges her actions were unacceptable and has handled the fallout very measured with no further incidents.
“My intent is she regains recovery center access the week she is competing, starting on Saturday, 08 March (the 2-women race begins 15 March). I think she should have the ability to see Ben in there too. I spoke with Julie about this as well and she seems initially supportive.
“Again, I would like a resolution before the weekend so our athletes can train, recover, prepare, and win.’
A meeting was set up for March 7, a week after the verbal altercation between Jones and Faltus, between Marra and Jones. Faltus was also invited but declined to participate.
“You indicated that you wished to move forward with a meeting with Bobsled, the OPTC, and Sports Med to share your perspective on the incident, express remorse, and ask for reconsideration regarding your access to medical treatment,” Mojarras wrote to Jones in a March 12 email recounting the March 7 meeting.
“After a robust discussion, you, Chris, Julie, and Amber agreed to a modified plan for you to receive medical treatment this week/during World Championships.”
Jones was told by Marra in the March 1 email that “your access to the Sport Medicine facilities has been revoked as of February 28. … Additionally, beginning Monday, March 17, your access to the Training Center will be revoked. This suspension will remain in effect for the next three (3) USABS-hosted programs you are scheduled to attend at the OPTC.
“Please understand the seriousness of this situation. We expect all athletes to maintain a high standard of professionalism and respect, both towards our staff and their teammates. We take these matters seriously to ensure a positive and respectful environment for everyone involved.”
But Fogt was informed by the USOPC on May 29 that Jones’ access to the OPTC and USOPC services would not resume until August 3.
“So, to be clear, I was never formally notified of this ‘extension,’” Jones wrote in an email to SCNG.
“The original suspension appeared to end in March. Coach Fogt said it would all die down. But it didn’t and then it was quietly extended. I started pushing for athletes’ rights around April when it became clear that it was no longer about punishing me it was more about retaliation and preventing me now from having opportunities to make the next Olympic team. To this day, I’ve never been granted a hearing. No formal review has taken place.
“The coach and I initially believed the ‘three training camps’ referred to team selection races right after World Championships and Olympic team selection prep — including the June push camp and July events. I had also applied for full-time housing, so those camps would’ve been part of my official Olympic prep period.
“Instead, they extended my ban until August 3 — which goes well beyond the original three camps. What’s more concerning is that both the coach and team manager said they’d never seen a suspension like this. Normally, it’s a specific timeframe (e.g., 14 days). But banning someone from ‘all Team USA bobsled opportunities’ gave them unlimited discretion — and allowed them to keep extending it without clarity or end date.
“Also the camps are where we form camaraderie as a team, so barring me from forming friendships with the pilots that I need to be teammates with drastically impacts my chances to make the Olympic team.
“Also, I had already been removed from Sports Med before World Championships. That was the first phase of punishment. Then I was banned from the OTC entirely after World Champs. Then they extended it through Olympic training camp the WHOLE SUMMER. So this was a three-phase ban — and I never agreed to any of it.”
Jones has retained John Manly, an Orange County attorney, who on May 12 wrote to the USOPC requesting that the organization mediate Jones’ dispute with the OPTC sports medicine clinic in 10 business days. If they didn’t meet the timeline, Jones would file suit, Manly said.
“As we are sure you understand, USOPC, on its own behalf, cannot commit to a fruitful and productive mediation without sufficient time to evaluate Ms. Jones’s claims; such an assessment cannot be completed within the 10 business days outlined in your letter,” Jillian D. Willis, a Washington, D.C., lawyer representing the USOPC, wrote in a May 21 letter to Manly. “We look forward to discussing Ms. Jones’s concerns as soon as practicable once we have completed our review and assessment. … We hope that this matter can be resolved short of litigation. If, however, Ms. Jones chooses to move forward with any claims against USOPC without further discussion, our client will vigorously defend itself.”
So far the USOPC has not agreed to schedule mediation.
BACK ON BAYOU
In the meantime, while her rivals for spots on Team USA are training on the push track in Lake Placid’s ice house, Jones is 1,600 miles away in Baton Rouge, where the only available ice comes in drinks and plastic bags.
Jones estimates the OPTC ban has cost her around $35,000 between medical and treatment bills, travel and housing. She had to fly a physical therapist into Lake Placid to treat her during Worlds.
Her costs would be even greater if she didn’t have access to LSU’s athletic training and sports medicine facilities.
“I have been out of LSU for a while,” Jones said. “I graduated in 2005, that’s 20 years. If I walk into LSU Sports Med right now, and I am an Olympic athlete, and they know I’m currently training, they’ll take me in. I could walk in right now and say, ‘Hey, can I get a massage on my back?’ And they would treat me.
“And I have not been at LSU in 20 years. That’s how well they take care of their Olympic athletes that currently are training, not retired, but current athletes that are training to fight for Team USA and represent their country. Their alumni they take care of. So why at the Olympic Training Center is there a different standard? And I’m in their system, and I’m competing for Team USA.”
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