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PARIS — Former Olympic fencing champion Laura Flessel and world swimming champion Camille Lacourt will head two of the 69 collective relays of torchbearers for the Paris 2024 Olympics, organizers said Wednesday.
Some 11,000 people will carry the Olympic torch, and among them, 3,000 will do it within a relay leg featuring 24 bearers, two of them being captained by Flessel, the two-time fencing gold medalist in 1996, and Lacourt, the five-time swimming world champion.
Pascal Gentil, a taekwondo bronze medalist in 2000 and 2004, will also be a relay captain.
“It’s a huge honor to be the captain of a relay team made up of young people, volunteers, judges, seniors … and with equal numbers of men and women,” Gentil said.
The names of individual torchbearers will be announced Monday, Paris 2024 organizers said.
Greek Olympic rowing champion Stefanos Ntouskos will be the first torchbearer after the lighting ceremony in ancient Olympia.
The Olympic flame will be lit in Greece’s Olympia, birthplace of the ancient Games, on April 16 in a traditional ceremony with an actress playing a high priestess igniting the torch using a parabolic mirror and the sun.
The high priestess will pass the flame to Ntouskos, who won gold in the men’s single sculls at the Tokyo Games in 2021, at the edge of the ancient Olympic stadium in Olympia.
After an 11-day relay across mainland Greece and seven of its islands, with the help of 600 torchbearers, the flame will be handed over to Paris Games organizers in Athens on April 26, with water polo Olympic silver medalist Ioannis Fountoulis as the final torchbearer before the handoff.
The flame will depart on board a three-masted ship, the Belem, for the port city of Marseille, where the sailing competitions at the Olympics will take place, for the start of the French leg of the relay.
The Paris Olympics will be held from July 26-Aug. 11.