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The Latest: Bolt celebrates by throwing the javelin _ Really

RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) - The Latest on the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro (all times local):

1:45 a.m.

How did Usain Bolt celebrate winning a ninth Olympic gold medal?

He went into a darkened Olympic Stadium, surrounded by volunteers - and started throwing a javelin.

Really.

After his news conference ended in the wee hours of Saturday morning, the Jamaican sprint superstar who says the Rio Games are his last Olympics came back onto the track with most of the lights in the stadium having already been turned off.

Bolt took a couple throws of the javelin, the last one going about 50 meters.

He posed for some pictures afterward, the javelin - which he requested a formal measurement of - still stuck in the Olympic Stadium turf.

Bolt's final throw, by the way, would have earned him a sixth-place finish at this year's Jamaican national championships.

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1:30 a.m.

Don't think the United States is the only squad with disqualification problems.

Britain was thrown out of the 4x400 meter final for a bad changeover of the baton in the first heat. The British team protested the exclusion but it was denied.

Britain had won its heat and stood a good chance of medaling in Saturday's final. At their home Olympics four years ago, they finished fourth.

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12:40 a.m.

Usain Bolt bid a blazing-fast farewell to the Rio Games - and likely the Olympics altogether - with yet another anchor leg for the ages.

He turned a close 4x100 relay race against Japan and the United States into a never-a-doubt runaway, helping Jamaica cross the line in 37.27.

Bolt's record in Olympic finals is nine races, nine wins. Nobody's done that before, and nobody's on the horizon to do it again soon.

After his 4x100 win he said: "I am just relieved. It's happened. I am just happy, proud of myself. It's come true."

Japan won the silver medal, finishing .33 seconds behind.

Meanwhile, the U.S. team was disqualified - again.

The disqualification came after the U.S. exchanged illegally outside the zone at the first change. As a result, Canada was elevated to the bronze-medal position.

It was the ninth time since 1995 that the U.S. men have been disqualified or failed to get the baton around at an Olympics or world championships.

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12:25 a.m.

There was an unusual guest joining the raucous Brazilian crowd at the men's volleyball semifinals.

A large bat started flying around the Maracanazinho arena as Brazil played Russia for a spot in the final.

The bat went across the court above the players then started flying low near the fans on the stands, amusing the crowd and momentarily taking its attention away from the match.

Some fans had to duck as the animal went around a few times before eventually finding its way out through one of the exits.

The match was not interrupted, and Brazil went on to win in three sets to reach its fourth straight Olympic final.

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12 a.m.

Brazil defeated defending Olympic champion Russia 25-21, 25-20, 25-17, to reach the final of the men's volleyball tournament for the fourth straight time.

The hosts will play Sunday's final against Italy, which outlasted the United States in a five-setter in Friday's other semifinal.

Brazil won the gold in 2004 in Athens, but is coming off losses in the last two Olympic finals. It was defeated by Russia in 2012 in London.

Italy won the bronze in 2012.

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11:15 p.m.

Usain Bolt has completed his triple-triple, anchoring the Jamaica 4x100-meter relay to victory in the final to ensure three gold medals at three consecutive Olympics.

The U.S. team was disqualified - again.

Bolt waved the baton to the crowd after coasting across the finish in a winning time of 37.27 seconds for his ninth Olympic gold medal.

Japan took silver in 37.60, with Aska Cambridge holding off American Trayvon Bromell by 0.02.

The U.S. team was later disqualified for exchanging illegally outside the zone at the first change, and Canada was elevated to the bronze-medal position in a national record 37.64.

It was the ninth time since 1995 that the U.S. men have been disqualified or failed to get the baton around at an Olympics or world championships.

The Japanese team was technically flawless and had the lead going into the last baton change, but Bolt pulled away, as he has done so often, in what is most likely to be his last run at the Olympics.

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10:55 p.m.

DISQUALIFICATION ALERT: The U.S. men's relay has done it again, being disqualified after crossing the line in third place in the men's 4x100.

Canada was elevated to third place on Friday in a national record 37.64 seconds.

Usain Bolt anchored Jamaica to yet another win - his ninth Olympic gold medal - and Japan finished a surprising second.

The team from Trinidad and Tobago was also disqualified.

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10:52 p.m.

Jenn Suhr broke down in tears after failing to defend her gold medal in the pole vault and said she's scared about her health.

The American says she's been sick for 10 days, was coughing up blood Friday and is now concerned her illness is worse than a respiratory infection.

Suhr said she vomited twice during Friday night's pole vault and began crying as she discussed how she trained for four years for a repeat gold but is feeling sicker than she's ever felt in her life.

Suhr eliminated with a mark of 4.60 and placed equal-seventh

Ekaterini Stefanidi of Greece won the gold medal in the women's pole vault with a mark of 4.85 meters.

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10:55 p.m.

Cheick Sallah Sisse of the Ivory Coast has won the men's taekwondo gold medal in the 80-kilogram division after defeating Britain's Lutalo Muhammad in a finish that saw him surge ahead in the last second of the match.

Sisse won Friday by a score of 8 to 6.

Although Muhammad was leading through most of the fight, Sisse landed a back kick just as the match ended to put him ahead.

Sisse, seeded third, won the African Championships this year in addition to the German Open. Muhammad previously won a bronze at the London Games.

The men's bronze medals were won by Tunisia's Oussama Oueslat and Milad Beigi Harchgani of Azerbaijan.

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10:45 p.m.

MEDAL ALERT: Usain Bolt has completed his triple-triple, anchoring the Jamaica 4x100-meter relay to victory in the final to ensure three gold medals at three consecutive Olympics.

Bolt, who has won the 100, 200 and 4x100 relay gold medals at Beijing, London and now Rio, crossed in 37.27 seconds on Friday.

Japan set an Asian record to take the silver in 37.60, holding off the third-place Americans by 0.02.

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10:40 p.m.

MEDAL ALERT: Ekaterini Stefanidi of Greece has won the gold medal in the women's pole vault with a mark of 4.85 meters.

Sandy Morris of the United States, silver medalist at the world indoors, took silver on a countback at the same mark and Eliza McCartney won the bronze in a New Zealand national record 4.80.

Defending champion Jenn Suhr of the United States was eliminated with a mark of 4.60 and placed equal-seventh.

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10:40 p.m.

Vivian Cheruiyot of Kenya won the women's 5,000 meters gold in Rio after overtaking Almaz Ayana of Ethiopia and setting an Olympic record of 14 minutes, 26.17 seconds.

The 32-year-old Cheruiyot adds the Olympic title to two world championships in the 5,000 meters and one in the 10,000. She took silver in the 5,000 at the London Games four years ago.

It initially appeared that Ayana would go for a second world record, after already setting a massive new mark in the 10,000 on the opening morning of the track program last week. But the efforts of the Olympic week appeared to catch up with her as she slumped late in the Saturday night race.

Ayana set off strongly and seemed to take the lead for good after one third of the race. But fatigue caught up with her and Cheruiyot and compatriot Hellen Obiri, who won the bronze, saw their chance.

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10:35 p.m.

The U.S. women have retained the 4x100-meter relay title and helped Allyson Felix win her record fifth Olympic gold medal.

The Americans, who needed to set a qualifying time in a solo rerun hours after dropping the baton in the preliminaries and getting a second chance on protest, won the final in 41.01 seconds.

It was an impressive comeback after near disaster on Thursday, when Felix dropped the baton after being bumped by a Brazilian runner. That led to the re-run, and the Americans qualified fastest, taking the place of China in the final.

A Jamaican team containing Elaine Thompson and Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce, took silver in 41.36. Britain won bronze in a national record 41.77.

The 30-year-old Felix entered the games as one of six women with four Olympic gold medals in track and field.

Felix ran the second leg for the Americans, the same section as 100- and 200-meter gold medalist Thompson, and passed to English Gardner, who ran a powerful curve to give her team the lead.

Tori Bowie ran the anchor leg and held off Fraser-Pryce as the Americans only narrowly missed the world record.

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10:35 p.m.

MEDAL ALERT: Dilshod Nazarov of Tajikistan won the hammer throw at the Olympics, beating veteran Ivan Tsikhan of Belarus for gold.

Nazarov threw 78.68 meters on his penultimate attempt on Friday, while 40-year-old Tsikhan had 77.79. Wojciech Nowicki of Poland took bronze with 77.73.

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10:35 p.m.

Denmark will face France in the Olympic men's handball final after beating Poland 29-28 in extra time semifinal.

Traditionally a power in the women's game, but having never won an Olympic medal, Denmark will be the underdog Sunday against a French team which is reigning Olympic and world champion.

Poland had taken Friday's game to extra time with Michal Daszek's goal to tie the score two seconds before the end of the second half. However, good shooting and big saves from goalkeeper Niklas Landin Jacobsen brought Denmark the win.

Earlier, France beat European champion Germany 29-28 in the first semifinal. France can become the first men's team to win three consecutive Olympic gold medals if it beats Denmark on Sunday.

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10:35 p.m.

MEDAL ALERT: South Korea's Oh Hye-Ri has won the women's 67-kilogram taekwondo gold medal, proving once again that the country that created the martial art can sometimes still dominate.

Oh defeated France's top-seeded Haby Niare in a tense, action-packed final. Although Oh didn't score until the second round, she quickly landed numerous head shots within about 30 seconds to take a definitive lead.

Oh won by a score of 13 to 12.

South Korea won only one gold medal at the London Games and has now doubled its count at Rio, after So-Hui Kim took gold in the women's light flyweight category on Wednesday.

The women's bronze medals were won by Ruth Gbagbi of the Ivory Coast and Turkey's Nur Tatar.

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10:25 p.m.

MEDAL ALERT: The U.S. women have retained the 4x100-meter relay title and helped Allyson Felix win her record fifth Olympic gold medal.

The Americans, who needed to set a qualifying time in a solo rerun hours after dropping the baton in the preliminaries and getting a second chance on protest, won Friday's final in 41.01 seconds.

A Jamaican team containing Elaine Thompson and Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce, was second in 41.36. Britain won bronze in a national record 41.77.

The 30-year-old Felix entered the games as one of six women with four Olympic gold medals in track and field. .

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10 p.m.

MEDAL ALERT: Vivian Cheruiyot of Kenya set an Olympic record to win gold in the 5,000 meters, coming from behind to beat favorite Almaz Ayana of Ethiopia.

Cheruiyot went past Ayana with less than two laps to go and could not be caught as she finished in 14 minutes 26.17 seconds. Hellen Obiri of Kenya took silver 3.60 second behind.

Ayana, the 10,000 Olympic champion, finished in third in 14:33.59.

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9:55 p.m.

UPSET ALERT: Jenn Suhr, the gold medalist at the London Olympics, is out of medal contention in the women's pole vault after failing to clear 4.70 meters. There were still six vaulters in the competition.

The 34-year-old American had been sick and was "coughing up blood," her husband/coach Rick Suhr said before Friday's final.

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9:40 p.m.

American swimmer Gunnar Bentz is back home, and he says he never lied about being robbed while out with teammates on the final night of Olympic swimming.

In a statement released late Friday, he says he never saw anyone break down a bathroom door, and that the swimmers relieved themselves on nearby bushes after a night out.

He says teammate Ryan Lochte tore a sign down from the building, and then the four returned to their taxi.

He says they were ordered out of the cab by security guards and ultimately forced, with guns drawn, to sit on a nearby sidewalk. He says then, Lochte got up and yelled at the guards.

A translator assisted and told them they needed to pay money to leave, Bentz says. He and teammate Jimmy Feigen paid about $50 in total, and he says the guns were lowered and they were allowed to leave.

Bentz also says there were additional video angles that support his account that may not have been released.

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9:40 p.m.

Javon Francis overtook David Verburg just before the finish to give Jamaica first spot in the first of the men's 4x400-meter relay preliminaries at 2 minutes, 58.29 seconds, 0.09 ahead of the American team, which led most of the race.

Britain won the second heat in 2:58.88, holding off the Belgian team, which set a national record 2:59.25 to advance with the fourth-fastest time.

The men's final will be the last track event in the Olympic Stadium on Saturday.

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9:35 p.m.

Allyson Felix may get another chance at an Olympic gold medal, regardless of what happens in the 4x100-meter relay final, after the United States qualified fastest for Saturday's 4x400 relay final.

Phyllis Francis anchored the 4x400 relay in the first of two preliminaries Friday night and finished 20 meters clear of second-place Ukraine in a season-best 3:21.42. Poland and Australia were third and fourth to reach the final.

Jamaica won the second 4x400 qualifying heat in 3:22.38, followed by Britain and Canada.

World champion Felix placed second in the 400, missing a record fifth Olympic gold medal. She did not run in the 4x400 preliminaries - which were scheduled less than two hours before the 4x100 final - but would be an obvious contender for a spot in the U.S. team for the 4x400 final.

After the race, Francis played it coy when asked if Felix would the run the final, saying she'd leave the final lineup a mystery. One problem - Felix already has said she'd run.

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9:10 p.m.

American swimmer James Feigen is on his way home from Brazil.

The U.S. Olympic Committee says Feigen is on a flight that left Rio de Janeiro on Friday night.

Feigen is the last of the four U.S. swimmers involved in a highly-publicized incident at a Rio gas station to leave the country.

Earlier this week, a judge ordered Feigen's passport be seized while police investigated what swimmer Ryan Lochte initially described as an armed robbery.

Police said the robbery story was fabricated and that the swimmers vandalized a gas station bathroom early Sunday after a night of partying.

Before he was allowed to leave, Feigen agreed to pay $10,800 to a Brazilian charity.

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AP Summer Games website: http://summergames.ap.org

Britain's Martyn Rooney wins a men's 4x400-meter relay heat during the athletics competitions of the 2016 Summer Olympics at the Olympic stadium in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Friday, Aug. 19, 2016. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip) The Associated Press
Jamaica's Usain Bolt celebrates winning the gold medal in the men's 4 x 100-meter relay final, during the athletics competitions of the 2016 Summer Olympics at the Olympic stadium in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Friday, Aug. 19, 2016. (AP Photo/Matt Dunham) The Associated Press
Russia's Egor Kliuka, left, spikes as Brazil's Bruno Rezende (1) and Lucas Saatkamp, right, defend during a men's semifinal volleyball match at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Friday, Aug. 19, 2016. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson) The Associated Press
Japan's Aska Cambridge, left, Jamaica's Usain Bolt, center, and United States' Trayvon Bromell compete in the men's 4x100-meter relay final during the athletics competitions of the 2016 Summer Olympics at the Olympic stadium in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Friday, Aug. 19, 2016. (AP Photo/Martin Meissner) The Associated Press
Jamaica's Usain Bolt, center, competes in the men's 4x100-meter relay final during the athletics competitions of the 2016 Summer Olympics at the Olympic stadium in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Friday, Aug. 19, 2016. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip) The Associated Press
Greece's Ekaterini Stefanidi competes in the women's pole vault final, during the athletics competitions of the 2016 Summer Olympics at the Olympic stadium in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Friday, Aug. 19, 2016. (AP Photo/Matt Slocum) The Associated Press
United States' Mike Rodgers, left, and Justin Gatlin, right, walk past Japan's Ryota Yamagata, Shota Iizuka, Yoshihide Kiryu and Aska Cambridge after the men's 4x100-meter relay final during the athletics competitions of the 2016 Summer Olympics at the Olympic stadium in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Friday, Aug. 19, 2016. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong) The Associated Press
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