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Pairs judging under scrutiny
MSNBC ^ | 2/12/2002

Posted on 02/12/2002 12:05:56 PM PST by Utah Girl

David Pelletier tries to console partner Jamie Sale after their scores were posted following their performance in the pairs free skate Monday night. The Canadian pair won the silver medal.

When the marks flashed and the boos rained down, David Pelletier buried his face in his hands and Jamie Sale's eyes filled with tears. There was no easy way to explain how they could have looked so magical, yet come away with silver.

IF ONLY THEY'D MADE some mistake, left something out, maybe then they could understand. But this is figure skating, and the answers are rarely simple.

"That's the way skating works," said Sale, trying to contain her emotions. "It's judged."

In a decision that immediately sparked yet another judging controversy, Russians Elena Berezhnaya and Anton Sikharulidze edged Sale and Pelletier of Canada by the minutest of margins Monday night to win the pairs gold.

"It was like somebody punched me in the stomach," Pelletier told NBC's "Today" show Tuesday morning after the Canadians stayed up all night giving interviews. "But at the same time, we can sit here and talk about it for weeks but it's not going to change the results."

The International Skating Union announced Tuesday an inquiry would be launched into the judging.

The ISU made a statement which read: "Following the reaction of the public and the media to the results of the pairs event at the Salt Lake Ice Center last night, and to respect public opinion, the ISU is doing an internal assessment to monitor if the ISU rules and procedures have been respected.

"Any further comment will be given when appropriate."

The ISU made its statement after a routine judges' meeting to look back at Monday's voting.

There might be changes in the sport because of the decision, longtime coach Frank Carroll said.

"This is the worst thing that's happened in a long time in figure skating," said Carroll, who was Linda Fratianne's coach in 1980, when Fratianne lost the gold medal to East Germany's Anett Potzch amid allegations of judges trading votes along political lines.

"People say figure skating shouldn't be in the Olympic Games because it's a play sport, it's not a real sport (and) - you can almost see where they're coming from ... when you watch that on TV," Carroll added. "The ISU has a lot of work to do as far as getting the judging system worked out."

A call to a spokeswoman for the International Skating Union on Tuesday morning was not immediately returned. NBC commentators were amazed at the decision. Sandra Bezic, a former Canadian pairs champion, even went so far as to say she was "embarrassed for our sport."

"How did that happen?" asked Scott Hamilton, the 1984 Olympic champion. "(They) won that program, there's not a doubt for anyone in the place, except for maybe a few judges.

"That will be debated forever."

(NBC is a partner in the joint venture that runs NBCSports.com.) "Without a doubt, I am ashamed for my sport," said the Canadian world champions' choreographer, Lori Nichol, who admittedly is not unbiased.

For the Russian coach, however, the issue was closed.

"For two years, we considered that Elena and Anton won, but it went to the other couple," said coach Tamara Moskvina, referring to recent losses by her top pair, including their loss to the Canadians at last spring's world championships in Vancouver, British Columbia.

"We didn't accuse the North American block, we just accepted it. So now it is our time."

Sale and Pelletier put on the kind of memorable performance that defines a career. And the Canadians did it even after Sale had the wind knocked out of her when she crashed into Sikharulidze during warmups.

Though she initially felt "paralyzed" by the crash, Sale and Pelletier skated with passionate abandon. Every move and detail of their "Love Story" program was flawless, including two huge throw jumps. Fans were chanting "Six! Six!" when it ended - begging the judges to award the Canadians a perfect score.

Pelletier was so overcome he dropped to his knees and kissed the ice, then leaned back and let out a scream as he pumped his fists.

"We didn't come here to win gold, we came here to do our best," Sale said. "We were on tonight, we really were. What else can you ask for?"

Especially considering the pressure they've been under. Sale and Pelletier had won nine competitions in a row, including the world championships last spring, and they gave Canada its best hope to win its first pairs gold since 1960.

They couldn't go anywhere without someone wishing them well - expectations that became more of a burden than an inspiration.

"The last six months were so tough," Pelletier said. "You go to the grocery store and it's, ?Bring back the gold.' You go to the hardware store and it's, ?Bring back the gold.' I'm just trying to buy a hammer!"

Family and friends tried to ease the couple's pain by serenading them with "O, Canada" when they arrived at Canada House in Salt Lake City early Tuesday.

Pelletier said: "When the marks came up, I am a human being, I was sad to come second.

"It is tough tonight. It is the toughest day of my life ... When I turn 50, I am sure I will look at the medal and say ?Well, it seems like it does not shine enough. It should be gold."'

But it will always be tinged with thoughts of what might have been.

Berezhnaya and Sikharulidze's program, to "Meditation," was strong but hardly perfect. Sikharulidze stepped out of a double axel, and they couldn't match the Canadians' emotion.

Yet they still collected seven 5.9s for artistry, with the Chinese and Polish judges favoring the Russians and making the difference, ensuring a Russian or Soviet pair has won every gold medal since 1964.

The Canadians got only four 5.9s for artistry.

Judges from Russia, China, France, Poland and Ukraine placed the Russian pair first.

Pelletier claimed: "We have lost because of the French judge."

The U.S., Canadian, German and Japanese judges awarded their top marks to the Canadians.

But Sikharulidze refused to apologize for the shiny golden disc hanging around his neck. He and Berezhnaya were silver medalists four years ago, and it's been anything but a smooth transition from second to first.

They withdrew from the 2000 world championships after Berezhnaya failed a drug test, which she said was caused by over-the-counter cold medicine. They were then suspended for three months by the International Skating Union and stripped of their European crown.

"Yeah, sure, because I have a gold medal," Sikharulidze shot back when someone asked if he and Berezhnaya had skated a winning program. "All competitions are decided by fate."

China's Shen Xue and Zhao Hongbo won the bronze.

American champions Kyoko Ina and John Zimmerman finished fifth in a performance Ina called "the best rush I have ever felt in my career."

Ina, who was ninth in the 1994 Games and fourth in Nagano in 1998 when she partnered with Jason Dungjen, leaped up like a schoolgirl with straight A's on her report card when she saw the couple's marks.

"I can walk away and say, ?Wow, that was terrific,"' she said.

That's a feeling Sale and Pelletier will never know.

"What we can't control, we can't control," he said. "That's the way it is."




Tuesday, February 12, 2002
 
Judges' scorecard

Associated Press

At Salt Lake City

The top two pairs, with how they were ranked in the long program by judges and their scores from the nine judges.


1, Elena Berezhnaya and Anton Sikharulidze, Russia, 1.0.
1   5.8   5.9   11.7
1   5.8   5.9   11.7
2   5.7   5.9   11.6
1   5.8   5.9   11.7
1   5.7   5.9   11.6
2   5.7   5.8   11.5
1   5.8   5.9   11.7
2   5.8   5.8   11.6
2   5.7   5.9   11.6

Fix


2, Jamie Sale and David Pelletier, Canada, 2.0.
2   5.8   5.8   11.6
2   5.9   5.8   11.7
1   5.8   5.9   11.7
2   5.8   5.8   11.6
2   5.8   5.8   11.6
1   5.9   5.9   11.8
2   5.8   5.8   11.6
1   5.9   5.9   11.8
1   5.8   5.9   11.7



TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: olympicslist
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To: Utah Girl
"American champions Kyoko Ina and John Zimmerman finished fifth in a performance Ina called "the best rush I have ever felt in my career."

I believe that Ina and Zimmerman's beautiful, athletic, invigoratingly enthusiastic performance was absolutely the best. Moreover, their gracious attitude shines brightly in the aftermath of the judges rating who should have awarded the American couple at least the silver medal.

41 posted on 02/12/2002 5:47:03 PM PST by harpo11
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To: Utah Girl
Pelletier claimed: "We have lost because of the French judge."

Perhaps now these stupid French Canadians will realize that the French hate them as much as they hate people from the US. They are all Americans, even if they speak "french." It would be nice if this started a trend for the Quebecians to turn from their love of everything "french" and develop an identity of their own.

Everything French sucks. Their culture sucks, they stink, their women are ugly and their mothers dress them funny.

42 posted on 02/12/2002 7:14:03 PM PST by P-Marlowe
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To: redlipstick
Yes, the men were brilliant this evening. Yagudin was astounding, I feel bad for Plushenko for falling on the quad though. Timothy Goebel was simply amazing, and I loved the look on his face after he finished his short program. And Todd Eldredge, sigh. I also loved seeing Elvis Stojko skating again. Just a fun night for skating...
43 posted on 02/12/2002 7:36:34 PM PST by Utah Girl
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To: P-Marlowe
Hey what about this Fench Gal from The Legend Of 1900:

Larger Image

44 posted on 02/12/2002 11:21:50 PM PST by Revel
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To: Utah Girl
HAVE THERE BEEN ANY CONFESSIONS OR ACTUAL PROOF YET ABOUT THIS FROM THE FRENCH JUDGE OR OTHERS?

I UNDERSTAND THE CHINESE JUDGE SKIPPED TOWN AND THE FRENCH ONE MIGHT HAVE SPILLED THE BEANS.

ANYTHING KNOWN ABOUT AN ACTUAL CONFESSION?

45 posted on 02/12/2002 11:30:10 PM PST by A CA Guy
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To: P-Marlowe
If that does not show then try this: Link
46 posted on 02/12/2002 11:33:26 PM PST by Revel
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To: A CA Guy
Nope, and from what Scott Hamilton said last night, nothing can really be proven until the ice dancing on Friday and Sunday. Ice dancing in the 1998 Nagano Olympics was definitely fixed and rigged, and the ISU was told back then to clean up its act. The pairs problem at this competition is much more obvious. Hamilton showed last night, side by side, the mistakes the Russians made technically, and how the Canadians were clean. It became glaringly obvious that the fix was in watching them side by side. Mark my words, nothing will be done though, because nothing has been done since 1998.
47 posted on 02/13/2002 10:24:46 AM PST by Utah Girl
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