
Bronze-winning Olympic French swimmer Yohann Ndoye-Brouard wondered over the weekend if a medal he captured is from this past summer or 100 years ago?
That's because the bronze he won in the during the Paris 2024 Games seems to be deteriorating faster than a Léon Marchand lap.
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He rhetorically questioned on social media if his medal was from 2024 or 1924, with crying emojis.
온라인 카지노 웹사이트온라인 카지노 웹사이트 Paris 1924
— Yohann Ndoye Brouard (@yohann_2911)
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Ndoye-Brouard is the latest Paris 2024 Olympian to gently complain that their prized mementos are losing their shine four months after the Games.
The French newspaper Le Méridional on Saturday published a picture of the bronze won by Ndoye-Brouard 's teammate Clement Secchi, whose medal also appeared to be quickly losing its luster.
The medal's rough edges made it look more like another water-loving creature, “Peau de crocodile," according to Secchi.
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and gave the world one the first clues some medals could be less than Olympic quality when she appeared on 온라인카지노사이트's "Late Night with Seth Meyers" on Aug. 12, shortly after closing ceremonies.
She whipped out the bronze that she and her teammates won in a over
"It's gorgeous (but) it is wearing a little bit," , her right index finger swirling the edges of the medal. "It's a solid hunk of metal, it's a great piece of metal."

Representatives of the International Olympic Committee and Paris 2024 could not immediately be reached for comment Monday.
The medals awarded last summer each contain a small piece of iron from the famed Eiffel Tower, which has now (1900, 1924 and 2024).
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