OCR Text |
Show 4 Four gold medals awarded after judge made a bad call RUSSIAN Jamie Sale and David Pelletier landed all their jumps cleanly, toe. including a triple toe and a double axle-doub- le Richard Lacayo Special for The Sun On Saturday, Feb. 16, 2002, there were of smiles at the final outcome of the fig- ure skating fiasco at the Winter Games, especially from the Canadians. Jamie Sale and David Pelletier, who had been forcing smiles all week, flashed real ones when they heard that their silver medals in the ferociously disputed pairs skating event would be traded in lor gold. But what made the biggest difference last week were tears. Early on Tuesday morning, just hours after the gold medal had gone to the Russians, Yelena Berezhnaya and Anton Sikharulidze, the nine judges of the pairs event and two referees convened in a windowless basement room of the Salt Lake Ice Center. The door was sealed with thick tape that kept prying reporters from eavesdropping on the deliberations. It also prevented them from hearing the weeping of the French e Le Gougne. Ron Pfenjudge. ning is the U.S. referee who would bring Le Gougnc's accusations to Ottavio Cinquanta, president of the International Skating Union. Last week he was told that Le Gougne, 40, the crucial swing vote of the g event the night before, had sobbed to the astonished judges that her decision had been Marie-Rein- pairs-skatin- n viewing. thats enough. coerced. Le Gougne claimed that she had voted for the Russian skaters at the direction of the French skating federation and its pres"She was very ident, Didier Gailhaguet. emotional," recalls Pfenning. "She said she was pressured, that she had to put the Russians first, and she said, 'We must do something!"' Maybe this is what people mean by a watershed event. All last week in Salt Lake City's Olympic Village and in many other parts of the world, there was speculation that someone had leaned on Le Gougne to vote for the Russians in exchange for Russia's vote for the French team in the One Olympic skating judge, competition. who asked to remain anonymous, insisted that a deal had been struck: "The French have been trying to figure out how to win in ice dancing. I know Gailhaguet has been working for those votes." Gailhaguet denies those claims and suggests that pressure was brought upon Le Gougne from "left and right" implying that it came from Canadian skating officials as well. Whatever the truth turns out to be, international figure skating and the Olympic movement itself have been shaken as never before. Even before Tonya Harding went gunning for Nancy Kerrigan, figure skating had an image problem. Not on the ice. On Ever wanted to learn to scuba dive? At Dixie State College it is possible to get your PADI certification. PADI (Professional Association of Diving Instruction) is a worldwide company. One semester of Scuba lessons is all it takes to become SCUBA certified. In fact, you can even learn to be a divemaster or instructor at Dixie State. Because PADI is a worldwide company, you can get a job anywhere in the world Scuba Diving takes place. Your first breaths underwater will tell you this is awesome. You will feel completely weightless and undisturbed. No phones, no homework, no whimpering, nothing but a rush of bubbles past your body. You can try out scuba diving for free here at the college by contacting the Dixie Scuba instructor at Aqua Sports (688-DIVE- ). Classes are available two times a semester. There is still time this semester to enroll for spring block and take scuba here at Dixie State. Upon Completetion of your Scuba Certification you are certified for life. Dont miss out on this exciting opportunity at Dixie to take Scuba and learn to go down! I 2002 R iMr did, they would have seen that the technical differences between the Canadians and the Russians were At the Olympics, marginal but noticeable. Learn to Scuba at Dixie Special for the Sun If they PA 20, X h Skating judges don't have the luxury of split-scree- a lot FEBRUARY WEDNESDAY, THE SUN The Russian pair did the same jumps, but Anton Sikharulidze stepped out of his double axle. Note the flailing arm. the ice it's all double axles and triple Salchows and Kristi Yamaguchi twirling straight onto the Wheaties box. Say all you want about the smiley dudes on their snowboards, but when it comes to making the Winter Games a global fascination and a very considerable cash machine, it's the Brian Boitanos and Michelle Kwans of the world who count most. Where things get cloudy is at the judges table. For years the sport has been shadowed by stories of vote trading, favoritism, and collusion among judges who agree on the winners before the unknowing losers even start their routines. At the world championships three years ago, two judges from Russia and Ukraine were suspended for signaling to one another with their feet. Skating is full of fancy footwork, but we like to think it's confined to the skaters. Until last week, only real fans of the sport knew the extent to which skate judging can involve intrigue, deceit, and shady arithmetic. For them it was just mildly surprising that a flawless performance by the Canadians could get a silver medal while the gold went to a bumpier routine by the Russians. What was truly surprising was that the matter exploded. For that, credit is due to Jacques Rogge, the new president of the International Olympic Committee. It was Rogge who pressed on Cinquanta the idea to award a second set of gold medals to Sale and Pelletier - a notion suggested to him by Richard Pound, a Canadian member of the I.O.C. Rogge's joint press conference with Cinquanta was a diplomatic measure, allowing Cinquanta to say that the second gold was his idea. "It was the most graceful way of handling it," says Pound. -- |