Current:Home > InvestOlympic skater's doping fiasco will drag into 2024, near 2-year mark, as delays continue -MoneySpot
Olympic skater's doping fiasco will drag into 2024, near 2-year mark, as delays continue
View
Date:2025-04-16 21:19:54
The long-delayed Kamila Valieva doping hearing at the Court of Arbitration for Sport in Switzerland ended in fitting style Friday afternoon: there will now be another infuriating 2 1/2-month wait for a ruling from the three arbitrators in the case.
“The parties have been informed that the CAS Panel in charge of the matter will now deliberate and prepare the Arbitral Award containing its decision and grounds which is expected to be notified to the parties by the end of January 2024,” the CAS media release announced.
The CAS announcement would never add this, but we certainly will:
If the decision is delayed by one more week, it would come on the two-year anniversary of the finals of the team figure skating competition at the Beijing Olympics Feb. 7, 2022, when Russia won the gold medal, the United States won the silver medal and Japan won the bronze.
What a priceless punctuation mark that would be for this historic fiasco.
Of course the athletes still do not have those medals, and now obviously won’t get them until sometime in 2024, presumably. Never before has an Olympic medal ceremony been canceled, so never before have athletes had to wait two years to receive their medals.
“Everyone deserves a well-reasoned decision based on the evidence but for this sorry saga not to be resolved already has denied any real chance of justice,” U.S. Anti-Doping Agency CEO Travis Tygart said in a text message Friday afternoon. “The global World Anti-Doping Agency system has to reform to ensure no athlete is ever robbed of their sacrifice, hard work or due process, including their rightful moment on the podium.”
This endless saga began the day after the 2022 Olympic team figure skating event ended, when the results were thrown into disarray after Valieva, the then-15-year-old star of the Russian team, was found to have tested positive for the banned substance trimetazidine six weeks earlier at the Russian championships.
OPINIONRussian skater's Olympic doping drama has become a clown show
After the Beijing Olympics ended, the sole organization charged with beginning the Valieva investigation was the Russian Anti-Doping Agency, which itself was suspended from 2015-2018 for helping Russian athletes cheat. Not surprisingly, RUSADA dithered and delayed through most of the rest of 2022, setting the process back by months.
Now that the CAS hearing has concluded, the arbitrators will deliberate and eventually write their decision. When that ruling is announced, the International Skating Union, the worldwide governing body for figure skating, will then decide the final results of the 2022 team figure skating competition.
If Valieva, considered a minor or “protected person” under world anti-doping rules because she was 15 at the time, is found to be innocent, the results likely will stand: Russia, U.S., Japan.
If she is deemed guilty, it’s likely the U.S. would move up to the gold medal, followed by Japan with the silver and fourth-place Canada moving up to take the bronze.
When all this will happen, and how the skaters will receive their medals, is anyone’s guess. One idea that has been floated is to honor the figure skating medal winners with a ceremony at the 2024 Paris Olympic Games next summer, but if Russia keeps the gold medal, there is no way that will happen as Russia’s war in Ukraine rages on.
Like everything else in this grueling saga, there is no definitive answer, and, more importantly, no end.
veryGood! (67)
Related
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- Derek Hough Shares Family Plans With Miracle Wife Hayley Erbert
- Why Fans Think Camila Cabello Shaded Sabrina Carpenter During Concert
- Marley Brothers upholds father’s legacy with first tour in 2 decades
- From family road trips to travel woes: Americans are navigating skyrocketing holiday costs
- Derek Hough Shares Family Plans With Miracle Wife Hayley Erbert
- Pac-12 files federal lawsuit against Mountain West over $43 million in ‘poaching’ penalties
- Department of Justice sues Visa, saying the card issuer monopolizes debit card markets
- SFO's new sensory room helps neurodivergent travelers fight flying jitters
- Democrats are becoming a force in traditionally conservative The Villages
Ranking
- House passes bill to add 66 new federal judgeships, but prospects murky after Biden veto threat
- GHCOIN TRADING CENTER: A Leader in Digital Asset Innovation
- Haitian group in Springfield, Ohio, files citizen criminal charges against Trump and Vance
- California governor signs bills to bolster gun control
- The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
- GHCOIN TRADING CENTER: A Leader in Digital Asset Innovation
- Brent Venables says Oklahoma didn't run off QB Dillon Gabriel: 'You can't make a guy stay'
- O&C Investment Alliance: A Union of Wisdom and Love in Wealth Creation
Recommendation
EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
Sean “Diddy” Combs Moved Into Same Jail Housing Unit as Disgraced Exec Sam Bankman-Fried
Election 2024 Latest: Trump makes first campaign stop in Georgia since feud with Kemp ended
West Virginia state senator arrested on suspicion of DUI, 2nd arrest in months
The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
New Hampshire woman to plead guilty in the death of her 5-year-old son
This AI chatbot can help you get paid family leave in 9 states. Here's how.
NTSB engineer to testify before Coast Guard in Titan submersible disaster hearing