by Fastbackss The quadrennial tradition where my family hates me because the TV stays on non-stop and things get uttered like "can we eat early because the 100m prelims are coming up"
by ponchi101 I have lost track of the games. Are they still running the mixed events in track? And swimming? Those I thought were super fun, and it was an idea I had about 10 years ago.
by skatingfan
ponchi101 wrote: ↑Sat Jul 20, 2024 5:30 pm
I have lost track of the games. Are they still running the mixed events in track? And swimming? Those I thought were super fun, and it was an idea I had about 10 years ago.
Yes. Mixed 4x400 m in Athletics, and a 4x100 m mixed medley relay in swimming.
by Owendonovan I wonder how they came to have Coco be one of the flag bearers for the US Olympic team?
by skatingfan
Owendonovan wrote: ↑Thu Jul 25, 2024 11:53 am
I wonder how they came to have Coco be one of the flag bearers for the US Olympic team?
US flag bearers are selected by a vote of the athletes who are competing.
by Oploskoffie
Owendonovan wrote: ↑Thu Jul 25, 2024 11:53 am
I wonder how they came to have Coco be one of the flag bearers for the US Olympic team?
I think... (not entirely sure) that they do a vote within the team and that determines who gets to carry the flag?
- edit -
So yeah... What skatingfan said
by ashkor87 Kerber had announced her retirement after Olympics...she was a subtle and crafty player..good at counter-punching and great at changing the direction of her shot ..forehand down the line to finish a cross-court exchange...even when you knew
it was coming, it was startling
by ashkor87 Krejcikova and Siniakova together again..and, despite all the rumours to the contrary, it seems Tsitsi is, in fact, partnering Sakkari...Nadal is a very good doubles player, don't know how good Alcaraz is but Nadal is enough to win, I would think ..especially as Djokovic will knock him off early in singles...
by ashkor87 Rybakina has withdrawn...
by OploskoffieCanada football coach removed from Paris Games amid claims of ‘previous drone use’
by texasniteowl That was overall very impressive and creative.
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by ti-amie Celine left me in tears.
by Fastbackss We didn't even make it through the first night of Primetime coverage & I had already switched over to CBC (Canada) instead of NBC because -as always- it seems more genuine and authentic to the Olympic spirit (of all nations) instead of contrived for drama (for the US).
also Every four years I enjoy learning something (during the Ceremonies) about a country I (ignorantly) don't know anything about - similar to when a small college gets an auto bid to the NCAA basketball tournament that I haven't heard of before.
by Fastbackss (Also - I so enjoy watching during the day because "all" sports are broadcast. So far over coffee I have watched beach volleyball, volleyball, cycling time trial, and now doubles badminton. Supposedly skateboarding is to be on but I haven't seen that yet)
by ti-amieSouth Korea stung by introduction at Paris Olympics opening ceremony as North Korea
(Richard Pelham/Getty Images)
By Ben Burrows
Jul 27, 2024
South Korea is seeking a meeting with International Olympic Committee (IOC) president Thomas Bach after its 143 athletes were wrongly introduced as North Korean during the opening ceremony for the Paris Olympics.
The IOC was forced to issue a “deep apology” for the incident which saw the South Korean delegation announced as the “Democratic People’s Republic of Korea,” the full official name of North Korea, as their boat passed down the Seine.
The formal name of South Korea is the Republic of Korea.
North Korea, which has 16 athletes as part of its first delegation since 2016, was properly introduced later in the program in French and English.
The IOC issued an apology on its Korean-language X account, saying: “We would like to offer a deep apology over the mistake that occurred in the introduction of the South Korean delegation during the opening ceremony.”
IOC spokesperson Mark Adams on Saturday called the error “clearly deeply regrettable” and “an operational mistake” made in “an evening of so many moving parts.”
South Korea’s Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism (MCST) “expressed its regret” with vice minister Jang Mi Ran requesting a meeting with Bach promptly and asking the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to “convey a strong protest” to their French counterparts at government level.
The Korean Olympic Committee (NOC) and the Korea Sports Federation also contacted the Paris organizing committee in hopes of preventing “the misrepresentation of the Korean athletes” and said they would send an official letter of protest.
South Korea and North Korea have been established as separate entities since 1948 and have been in conflict after the Korean War of the early 1950s.
This is not the first occurrence of an incident of this type. In 2012, organizers in London blamed “human error” after a flag of South Korea was displayed alongside North Korea’s women’s team ahead of a game in the soccer tournament.
by ti-amieConvicted rapist Van de Velde booed on Olympic debut
Getty Images
Steven van de Velde is competing in the beach volleyball at the Paris Games
Laura Scott
Sports news correspondent in Paris
Amy Lofthouse
BBC Sport senior journalist in Paris
Published
28 July 2024, 10:46 BST
Convicted child rapist Steven van de Velde made his Olympic beach volleyball debut to a mixed reaction in Paris, with audible boos.
Van de Velde was sentenced to four years in prison in 2016 after admitting three counts of rape against a 12-year-old British girl.
He and volleyball partner Matthew Immers are ranked 10th in the world but lost 2-1 to Italy's Alex Ranghieri and Adrian Carambula, ranked 25th, at the Eiffel Tower Stadium.
The pair were introduced to the crowd together, with cheers as well as some boos as they walked out.
There were boos, along with applause, when Van de Velde was individually announced to the crowd before the match began.
All players shook hands before and after the match.
The Dutch pair are next in action on 31 July, when they face Chile's Marco and Esteban Grimalt at 15:00 BST.
An online petition calling for 29-year-old Van de Velde to be banned from the Olympics had received 90,000 signatures before he played his first match.
His inclusion in the Dutch team has been criticised by women's and safeguarding groups.
Fans speaking to BBC Sport before the match also felt he should not be competing.
One British fan said: "He's been open and honest about it and he's served his time, but personally, I think they could have made a different choice.
"They could have chosen someone else, avoided all the controversy and if it was a British person, I wouldn't be happy they would be in our team."
Another said that Van de Velde's inclusion "does not represent the spirt of the Olympics", while one German fan, when told by BBC Sport about the story, said: "I am very astonished. He should not be allowed to play."
However, one Dutch fan said it was "right" Van de Velde was competing, adding: "He's been punished and now it's over and he can continue with his life like anyone else."
His playing partner Immers, speaking after the match, also said he thought it was right that Van de Velde could compete.
"We talked about it one time and we want to enjoy every moment on this stage because we gave everything together for the past three years to qualify," he said.
"Steven is a really nice guy and for me, I played two years with him, there was nothing and now there is some people that don't like it because it is a big tournament."
Van de Velde is not staying in the Olympic village and will not do any post-match media.
There was extra security around him when he arrived in Paris with the rest of the team.
In previous interviews with Dutch media, Van de Velde said: "I can't reverse it, so I will have to bear the consequences. It has been the biggest mistake of my life."
Why is Van de Velde allowed to compete?
The International Olympic Committee (IOC) has said the selection of athletes for the Games was the responsibility of individual committees.
Van de Velde returned to playing in 2017. The Dutch Olympic Committee (NOC) said he had met guidelines set by the Dutch Volleyball Federation (NeVoBo) for athletes to resume competing after conviction.
The NOC said Van de Velde had returned to the playing arena "following a specialist treatment programme".
It added: "Van de Velde has fully engaged with all requirements and has met all the stringent risk assessment thresholds, checks and due diligence. Experts have stated that there is no risk of recidivism.
"Van de Velde has consistently remained transparent about the case which he refers to as the most significant misstep of his life. He deeply regrets the consequences of his actions for those involved."
In a statement to BBC Sport, it also said: "After his release, Van de Velde sought and received professional counselling. He demonstrated to those around him - privately and professionally - self-insight and reflection."
Mark Adams, spokesperson for the IOC, was asked on Saturday if the organisation was "comfortable" with Van de Velde's inclusion.
"To characterise it as comfortable and happy would not be correct," Adams said.
"We feel the NOC have explained their decision.
"Comfortable and happy, characterise it how you want, but the statement that they have given to us is correct and we will continue with the situation as it is."
Analysis
BBC Sports News Correspondent Laura Scott at the Eiffel Tower Stadium
Rarely does an athlete's selection for the Olympics or presence at a Games draw as much controversy as that of Van de Velde.
It has made a lot of people uncomfortable, but ultimately he is here because the NOC picked him and the International Olympic Committee - despite pressure including from safeguarding campaign groups - said the nomination of athletes was the sole responsibility of the respective NOCs.
On the way in, I stopped several fans to ask them for their views.
Some were not aware of the story, but we spoke to fans from Germany, the UK and Ireland who felt very strongly that he shouldn't be here and said they wouldn't be supporting him.
It was interesting that every Dutch fan I spoke to was either unwilling to talk about the subject or was supportive of Van de Velde.
by ashkor87 Alcaraz -Nadal will need a match or two to get synched ...they were not all that impressive in the first set .of course their opponents were pretty good.
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by Owendonovan Antidoping Agency Acknowledges Concern Over Use of Tainted Food as Excuse
After a spate of positive tests for performance-enhancing drugs by athletes, the World Anti-Doping Agency is investigating why China and other countries are citing contaminated food as an explanation.
The global antidoping regulator disclosed on Tuesday that it is investigating why athletes in China and other countries who are testing positive for banned drugs are escaping discipline through claims that they have unwittingly ingested the performance-enhancing substances through food.
The statement from the World Anti-Doping Agency came after The New York Times reported earlier on Tuesday on a previously undisclosed case in which two elite Chinese swimmers who tested positive for a powerful steroid in 2022 were cleared late last year after their country’s antidoping authority blamed contaminated hamburgers.
It was the third incident in recent years in which China blamed food contamination for positive tests among members of its national swimming team.
In its statement on Tuesday, the World Anti-Doping Agency, known as WADA, revealed that at the same time it was looking into how the two swimmers had tested positive, it was also examining the previously undisclosed cases of two other Chinese athletes in different sports — shooting and BMX bike riding — who tested positive in early 2023 for trace amounts of the same banned drug, metandienone.
“There have been many cases of positive tests that were eventually closed without sanction as no-fault violations, sometimes with unusual methods of contamination,” the statement said.
WADA said the problem extended beyond China to countries including the United States, where, it said, there have been several cases in recent months involving “highly intricate contamination scenarios” that were accepted as legitimate reason not to punish athletes. It did not provide any details.
The controversy around China has led to scrutiny over the entire global antidoping system, and in particular how much faith is placed in national bodies to police their own athletes.
Just before the Olympics, questions were raised over how British officials were able to clear Jade Jones, a double Olympic taekwondo champion, to try to secure a third title in Paris after she refused to provide a doping sample to drug testers. Such a refusal would typically result in a ban. She was cleared because of “exceptional circumstances” that have never been fully revealed.
“We are clean,” said Yang Junxuan, one of three swimmers who The Times reported also tested positive for a different banned substance several years earlier. “The results we are having now are the results of our scientific method of training.”
by ti-amie Errani's mom has gone global and is also now using beef from South America?
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by Oploskoffie Katie Ledecky is good at 1.500 metres freestyle. Like, too good, almost. The rest of the field looked happy to battle for silver and bronze because they knew they didn't stand a chance to win gold. Well done Katie!
Just to be clear - the gymnasts in the team event move from apparatus to apparatus during the competition so he wasn't sitting in the same spot the whole time. He had to walk from one chair to the next 5 times before he had to compete.
by ashkor87 Gymnastics..lovely to see the top competitors, from different countries- Biles, Andrade..sitting next to each other and chatting...doesn't happen much in any other sport..,? Could it be because they are not really competing directly with each other..just doing their own thing..
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by ti-amie Competitive shooters give some background on the pose by the "thesaurus".
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by ashkor87 Research shows the bronze medal winner is happier than the silver medal winner..obvious reasons but still, interesting!
by ponchi101 I forget who was the comedian that made a sketch about that.
If you get silver, your thoughts are: "Man, a little more and I could have won gold!".
You win bronze, and your thoughts are: "Man, at least I got something!".
by Owendonovan Simone Biles tweeted that she "loves her black job"
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"They see me ridin', they hatin'".
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I got nothing.
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by Owendonovan I wish I could trust the Chinese swimmers were clean.
by ponchi101 That is not how China views things. If you were not caught, you were clean.
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I watched this race live. It was really this close.
by ponchi101 Great 100 Mts dash. Super close.
Thompson had it but leaned at the wrong split second.
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The times have indeed changed.
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by ti-amie I saw it live on Peacock. I'm sure NBC is holding this back for its broadcast tonight.
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by ti-amie The arguments are still raging and will continue to I think. As the person who posted the response here said this has been the rule since forever.
by ti-amie A bit of an update on athletes who became ill after swimming in the Seine.
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by Fastbackss I have watched the Olympics my whole life and didn't know the torso counted. It's why I thought Noah lost (not just because Leigh Diffey said he did).
And the Seine - "we tested it tonight so tomorrow's event is a go..." there is a reason pride is a deadly sin.
by jazzyg The strange thing to me was not that NBC called the wrong winner for the 100-meter race. I thought the Jamaican had won, too. It was that after Lyles started celebrating, they waited nearly 20 seconds before saying anything, which was edited out of the primetime coverage to make it look like they announced Lyles as the winner the second he started celebrating.
The prolonged confusion during the day was very, very odd. And they never said who finished third, which also was edited in for the primetime re-broadcast.
by ti-amie
jazzyg wrote: ↑Mon Aug 05, 2024 5:17 pm
The strange thing to me was not that NBC called the wrong winner for the 100-meter race. I thought the Jamaican had won, too. It was that after Lyles started celebrating, they waited nearly 20 seconds before saying anything, which was edited out of the primetime coverage to make it look like they announced Lyles as the winner the second he started celebrating.
The prolonged confusion during the day was very, very odd. And they never said who finished third, which also was edited in for the primetime re-broadcast.
Thank you for this explanation. Someone on Xitter mentioned the editing but did not give a clear explanation about what was edited and why.
I saw it live on Peacock and I think everyone thought that Thompson won until both men were shown looking for the photo of the finish line and the time(s). Did they edit all of that out? If so that was kind of silly.
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by jazzyg No, they still showed both men waiting for the photo on both broadcasts. But on the nighttime replay, they moved up the proclamation of Lyles as the winner to the second he started celebrating instead of the actual announcement, which came after he ran down the track celebrating and after they showed his family happy in the stands while neither announcer said a word to fix the wrong call.
by ti-amie Lyles is running his 200m heat now. Live on Peacock.
Lyles was in Lane 6. A Jamaican man was in Lane 5. The Jamaican didn't automatically qualify coming in 4th behind a Japanese man and a Canadian.
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Duncan Murrell
@dv_murrell
·
12m
No DQs for similar actions during men’s 10K, or Josh Kerr’s semifinal. Or any of the 800s. And Tsegay is known for doing this nonsense.
by ti-amie Armand (Mondo) Duplantis going for a WR in the pole vault at 6.25m (20.5 feet) - and he got it right on his third try after winning the gold. What a wonderful scene in the Stade du France as the silver and bronze medalists cheered him on.
And beautiful.
One of those super creatures in the world.
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by ti-amie This is amazing.
by ti-amie Michael Johnson
@MJGold
Good accurate explainer of the effects on the body of sprinting 400 meters. Understanding this process was key to me breaking the WR and consistently running 43 seconds.
by ponchi101 Wow. I knew it is a strategic race, but did not know about the physiology of it. Amazing.
by ti-amieWant Free Ramen for Life? Win a Gold Medal for the Philippines.
Story by Evan Bleier
Carlos Edriel Yulo of the Philippines celebrates after winning the gold medal for vault on the second day of the gymnastics event finals during the Paris 2024 Olympic Summer Games. | Jack Gruber-USA TODAY Sports
In addition to receiving nearly $300,000 in cash from the government, Filipino gymnast Carlos Yulo is set to receive a condo and a lifetime supply of carbs and colonoscopies for bringing a pair of gold medals back to the Philippines from Paris.
Just the second Filipino Olympian to win gold after weightlifter Hidilyn Diaz became the first three years ago, Yulo took gold in the artistic gymnastics men's floor event on Saturday and followed it up with a win on the vault in Bercy Arena on Sunday.
"I was just hoping to perform well. I didn't really expect a medal. It really felt like a bonus for me. It's crazy, because last night I couldn't sleep," Yulo said on Sunday. "I was so hyped because I had won that gold medal. It still didn't sink in. This morning I was so sleepy. I didn't know what to do. But I did it today."
by ti-amie This was my first thought when I saw him collapse at the end of the race, especially since he's been masking since his last race.
Noah Lyles Diagnosed With COVID-19, Wins 200M Bronze Anyway
By Joe Lago | 3:49 PM EDT
The Paris Olympics track and field competition has showcased multiple miraculous comebacks, with the United States working the most miracles thanks to the gold-medal efforts of Noah Lyles in the 100 meters, Cole Hocker in the 1500 and Quincy Hall in the 400.
On Thursday in the men's 200-meter final, Lyles found himself trailing again in his signature event. Coming off the turn, he took the lead but never hit a higher gear. The reigning 200 world champion faded down the backstretch, with Botswana's Letsile Tebogo shockingly winning gold in an African record time of 19.46 seconds.
USA's Kenneth Bednarek (19.62) took silver. Lyles — the overwhelming race favorite — got the bronze in a time of 19.70.
Clearly, something was not right with Lyles, who walked onto the Stade de France track wearing a mask and sought medical attention immediately after the race. He ended up leaving the track in a wheelchair.
Not long after the race, the reason for Lyles' lackluster performance was revealed: He had been diagnosed with COVID-19 but decided to run anyway.
Lyles told NBC Sports that he felt "really horrible" after waking up at 5 a.m. on Tuesday. He knew it was more than just soreness after running the 100-meter final the night before.
"We woke up the doctors and we tested, and unfortunately it came out I was positive for Covid," Lyles told NBC Sports' Lewis Johnson. "My first thought was not to panic. I'm thinking I've been in worse situations. I've run in worse conditions, I felt. We just took it day by day, trying to hydrate as much and quarantined off."
Lyles, who has battled asthma since childhood, admitted that COVID sapped his strength for the 200 final.
"I'll definitely say it's taken its toll for sure," he said. "But I've never been more proud of myself for being able to come out here and getting a bronze medal, where last Olympics I was very disappointed. This time, I couldn't be more proud."
Lyles said he never considered not running the 200. "We were just going to try to quarantine as much as possible, stay away, not try to pass it off," he said, "and just, to be honest, give it my all."
Lyles still has the 4x100 relay next on his Paris Games schedule, but he didn't know if he could still be part of the U.S. team. He's content to let "Team USA do their thing."
"They've proven with great certainty that they can handle it without me," Lyles said. "And if that's the case coming off today, then I'm perfectly fine saying, 'Hey guys, you go do your thing. You guys have more than enough speed to be able to handle it and get the gold medal.'"
In a post-race statement, USA Track and Field confirmed Lyles' positive COVID-19 test, and, along with the U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee, it "swiftly enacted all necessary protocols to prioritize his health, the well-being of our team, and the safety of our fellow competitors." USAT also said it respected "his decision" to run.
Of course, Lyles' 200 defeat is a big victory for the NBA players and fans who took offense to his ridiculing of the league's use of "world champions" for its Finals winners.
by Fastbackss The weight thing is brutal - but more so because it's a DQ for the whole tourney and not that match.
by ponchi101 On the other hand...
That is the reason you have weight classes. She was 100 Grams overweight. Suppose you let her compete. What do you do with the person that was 150 grams over? How about 250?
You draw a line somewhere. And the line was her weight class.
by skatingfan I think the issue is the Olympic weight classes are different from regular competitions, so athletes are moving up or down to find a good fit.
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by Fastbackss
ponchi101 wrote: ↑Fri Aug 09, 2024 3:42 pm
On the other hand...
That is the reason you have weight classes. She was 100 Grams overweight. Suppose you let her compete. What do you do with the person that was 150 grams over? How about 250?
You draw a line somewhere. And the line was her weight class.
I agree she shouldn't have been able to compete. In the final.
But disqualified from the whole tourney??
by ti-amie There's petty and there's this...
by ti-amie I didn't get to watch any track and field/athletics yesterday so I just saw the replay of the mens 4x100 on Peacock. Horrible doesn't begin to describe the handoff to Bednarek. His teammate was literally running tandem with him for a few seconds. I also think the US women got away with a bad one from Gabby to Sha'carri but it was nowhere as bad as the men's.
Nice analysis of what went wrong for the US men. It's for track and field nerds only though
by Oploskoffie
ti-amie wrote: ↑Sat Aug 10, 2024 9:21 pm
There's petty and there's this...
I'm sure he had to try for his mother. She'd dyed her hair gold, after all
But yeah... Not entirely the Olympic spirit shall we say
by ti-amie Yemisi Ogunleye of Germany won the women's shot-put with a 20m throw. Amazing.
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by Fastbackss How does the Chiles "investigation" take that long.
What bunk.
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Fastbackss wrote: ↑Sun Aug 11, 2024 12:30 pm
How does the Chiles "investigation" take that long.
What bunk.
Should've been settled day of not days later and after Ms Chiles was awarded the medal. What a bad look for women's gymnastics. Because they took so long to "correct the error" many theories have blossomed online.
by Fastbackss It was already "odd" because the Romanian coaches didn't call for the challenge. Chiles' coaches did - but apparently 4 seconds too late.
If I were Chiles coach I would challenge asking "who was the timekeeper" "where is log of the time" etc - lob it back.
This is why real breakers did what they did at the closing ceremony. Australia should be ashamed of itself.
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by jazzyg The whole Chiles thing exhausts me on every front. Yes, it was incredibly poorly handled, but the judges incorrectly ruled the Romanian out of bounds and she deserves the bronze regardless of whether the appeal for Chiles' score was made on time.
The softness of people and the over-emphasis of sports in general drives me nuts. Both camps are claiming their gymnast has suffered severe emotional trauma based who finished third in a subjective sport where judges make the decisions. I feel awful about the racist responses Chiles has apparently received on social media, but that's an entirely different world-is-filled-with-sick-morons issue. The rest is dramatically overblown.
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jazzyg wrote: ↑Mon Aug 12, 2024 9:52 pm
The whole Chiles thing exhausts me on every front. Yes, it was incredibly poorly handled, but the judges incorrectly ruled the Romanian out of bounds and she deserves the bronze regardless of whether the appeal for Chiles' score was made on time.
Based on the photos I've seen the out of bounds deduction seems valid. My understanding is that the out of bounds decisions are done electronically on a trial basis, and then confirmed by the judges.
by Owendonovan I've coached gymnastics for 30+ years. I'm embarrassed. They're making athletes pay for the judges poor job performance. Once again, gymnastics governing body looks as incompetent as they actually are.
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by ti-amie My question is this: Are they saying this guy is on CAS? If so did he also rule on the Halep situation?
by skatingfan
ti-amie wrote: ↑Tue Aug 13, 2024 8:01 pm
My question is this: Are they saying this guy is on CAS? If so did he also rule on the Halep situation?
Not necessarily because there are a lot of approved arbitrators for the CAS panels, and usually the Olympic panels are convened on a case by case basis from the list that are available on short notice to hear cases.
ti-amie wrote: ↑Tue Aug 13, 2024 8:01 pm
My question is this: Are they saying this guy is on CAS? If so did he also rule on the Halep situation?
Not necessarily because there are a lot of approved arbitrators for the CAS panels, and usually the Olympic panels are convened on a case by case basis from the list that are available on short notice to hear cases.
Yeah don't get me wrong I'm just wondering because of the - weirdness - around both situations, specifically the withholding of the text of the Halep decision.
by ti-amie Wait are we supposed to feel sorry for this - person?
by ponchi101 Something about forgiveness, and having paid the debt society imposed on you (he did time, didn't he?), and growing up and realizing that you did something terrible indeed and feeling truly sorry about your past actions?
Not sure.
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DD Geopolitics
@DD_Geopolitics
Allegations have surfaced stating that Dr. Rachel Gunn aka RayGun, manipulated the qualifier by setting up her own governing body, denying grants to underprivileged performers, and allowing her husband to coach the national team.
Australians have started a petition demanding an investigation and apology, it has garnered over 13,000 signatures.
Should she be forced to apologize or was she humiliated enough?
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by ti-amie Here are real women break dancers who got overshadowed by the idiocy presented by the Australian woman.
by ti-amie There's a great 8m clip of the men's competition but the site rejects it and it's not on YouTube.
Still watching the real women breakers compete you see why people are upset about the woman Australia sent.
Also if you've never watched break dancing Josh Johnson in his routine gives a pretty good explanation of it.
DD Geopolitics
@DD_Geopolitics
Allegations have surfaced stating that Dr. Rachel Gunn aka RayGun, manipulated the qualifier by setting up her own governing body, denying grants to underprivileged performers, and allowing her husband to coach the national team.
Australians have started a petition demanding an investigation and apology, it has garnered over 13,000 signatures.
Should she be forced to apologize or was she humiliated enough?
It seems like she's conducting a social experimnet at the detriment of real break dancers. The question is - is it her fault or the Australian Olympic Committee's?
by skatingfan How quickly the world forgets Elizabeth Swaney.
by mmmm8 Yeah, but I definitely cannot do that. I CAN beat the breakdancing Olympian.
by ti-amie While that Australian woman was doing her imitation of a fish out of water this was happening.
Game recognizes game.
by ti-amie There's a lot of amazing stuff coming out of the Paralympics.
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by Fastbackss Always so good. Appreciate the extra coverage with each Paralympics
DD Geopolitics
@DD_Geopolitics
Allegations have surfaced stating that Dr. Rachel Gunn aka RayGun, manipulated the qualifier by setting up her own governing body, denying grants to underprivileged performers, and allowing her husband to coach the national team.
Australians have started a petition demanding an investigation and apology, it has garnered over 13,000 signatures.
Should she be forced to apologize or was she humiliated enough?
by ponchi101 The totally uncalled for, uninformed, what do you know, who asked for your opinion comment:
This is what happens when you let things that are not sports into the Olympics.
I will go sit in my corner now.
by Fastbackss You're entitled to have that comment
And , frankly, it's a bit why I struggle with sports that are judged.