PARIS -- IOC President Thomas Bach met with French athletes and Paris leaders of their 2024 bid at the start of a two-day visit in the French capital.Bach, who will meet French President Francois Hollande at the Elysee Palace on Sunday then attend a soccer match involving refugees, was invited by the bid committee.Paris is competing against Budapest and Los Angeles. The International Olympic Committee will choose the host in September 2017.Bach, who has already made equivalent trips to Los Angeles and Budapest, was greeted by athletes at Frances institute of sport then attended a private dinner with Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo.Next week, Bach will meet Italian officials, who still hope the Rome bid can be revived despite city council opposition. Cheap Air Max 95 China . Jane Virtanen scored two, and Alex Roach and Elliott Peterson rounded out the offence for the Hitmen (40-15-6). Brady Brassart chipped in with three assists. Colton McCarthy scored twice, Brayden Point had a goal and two assists, and Jack Rodewald also scored for the Warriors (15-35-9), who were 2 for 5 on the power play. Air Max 95 For Sale Online . -- Aldon Smith believes he is on the path to being sober for good. http://www.airmax95cheap.com/ . Ryan Garbutt had a goal and two assists as Dallas snapped a six-game losing streak with a 5-2 victory over the Edmonton Oilers on Tuesday night. Cheap Air Max 95 Free Shipping . The 18-year-old American had five birdies in her bogey-free round for a 17-under total of 196. Lee held the overnight lead but mixed three birdies with two bogeys for a 70. Air Max 95 Cheap Authentic . -- Most satisfying to Russ Smith about No. A triumphant Olympics for the U.S. team -- especially all those golden female athletes -- has come with some nasty aftershocks, raising more potential questions about gender inequality.Lets start with Hope Solo, who was suspended for six months and effectively kicked off the national womens soccer team for some sore-loser comments in the wake of an excruciating defeat.Still to come, presumably: Ryan Lochte, a 12-time Olympic medalist who awaits his fate for making up a fanciful tale about an armed holdup during a night of drunken revelry not long after the swimming competition ended.If Lochtes punishment from USA Swimming or the U.S. Olympic Committee for a much-worse transgression isnt at least as harsh as the one Solo received, it would logically seem to follow that the old boys club has won out again.Or does it?Since the two cases are hardly apples to apples, lets use them more as a jumping-off point for a serious discussion about sexism in sports. The timing couldnt be better, coming on the heels of female athletes claiming 61 of the 121 U.S. medals in Rio -- including 27 of 46 golds.These kinds of cases are really important, said Ellen Staurowsky, a professor of sports management at Drexel University, who plans to talk about both Solo and Lochte in her upcoming classes. Working with future leaders who are going to move into the industry, they need to be contemplating what the moral issues are and they need to be developing a sense of their own moral compass.Solos punishment likely ends her long tenure with the national team. After a shootout loss to Sweden and no medal for the mighty American womens team, the goalkeeper lashed out at the winners, calling them a bunch of cowards for their defensive style of play.It was a silly, ridiculous statement, of course, but many male athletes have said far more outrageous things while feeling the sting of defeat.Further complicating matters, this was not a one-off for Solo, whos had plenty of run-ins with teammates and coaches over the years, not to mention a still-pending domestic assault case and a monthlong suspension last year for being in a team van when her husband was arrested on drunken-driving charges.Which brings us to Lochte, the new poster child for white male entitlement and ugly American behavior.After getting hammered with three of his teammates, there was an ill-fated stop at a gas station to relieve themselves. What happened next remains a point of contention, but no one can deny that Lochte initially concocted a version of events totally out of touch with reality: robbers posing as police, he said, pulled over the swimmers taxi, pointed a gun right at brave Ryans head, and robbed him of his wallet and money.Actually, Lochte and his teammates sparked the whole affair by urinating outside the station, followed by Lochte, accoording to two of his teammates, ripping down a sign like some out-of-control frat boy.dddddddddddd Armed security guards confronted the swimmers and made them pay for the damage, which Brazilian authorities say -- and the Americans deny -- also included the trashing of a locked restroom. In addition, there are differing accounts of whether the guards pointed guns at the swimmers, which would seem far out of line with the offense.No matter. It was Lochtes lies that turned this into an international incident, and prompted both USA Swimming and the USOC to say theyre considering possible sanctions. He already was dropped by four major sponsors, though he has since been picked up by another company and reportedly landed a gig on Dancing With The Stars. (Solo already did a stint on the show, it should be noted.)Amy Randel, a professor in the sports business program at San Diego State University, said Friday that Solos previous misconduct skews a direct comparison with Lochte, whose only known misstep before Rio was that horrific, short-lived reality TV show, What Would Ryan Lochte Do?There is research that shows that women who violate stereotyped behavioral norms face negative consequences for that behavior, while men are given a wider berth for their behaviors, Randel wrote in an email. But it is difficult to use that lens to interpret these two cases since there is more involved here than just these athletes behavior at the 2016 Olympics.Even so, these cases are at least a worthy conduit to keep us all firmly focused on gender equality, a debate I found myself in the midst of at these Olympics.A newspaper headline over one of my swimming stories created a bit of a kerfuffle on social media, drawing criticism from those who said it was yet another example of how the accomplishments of female athletes always take a backseat to their male counterparts.Two weeks later, I still think Michael Phelps settling for a silver medal deserved top billing over Katie Ledecky winning gold in world-record time -- he is, after all, a 23-time gold medalist -- but I can now understand why so many folks took it personally (even when I pointed out that AP didnt write the headline, and did write an entirely separate story focusing on Ledeckys amazing Olympic performance).This issue is far more important than two imperfect athletes or social media trolls.Its about ensuring the fair treatment of all those marvelous female athletes.After wowing us in Rio, they deserve nothing less.---Paul Newberry is a national writer for The Associated Press. Write to him at pnewberry(at)ap.org or at www.twitter.com/pnewberry1963 . His work can be found at http://bigstory.ap.org/content/paul-newberry . ' ' '