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The Canadian Olympic Committee continues to believe Canada’s figure skating team deserves the bronze medal from the 2022 Beijing Olympic games despite ISU explanation.
Russia maintained podium position ahead of Canada after Valieva’s disqualificationThe Canadian Press
· Posted: Feb 09, 2024 7:32 PM EST | Last Updated: 28 minutes ago
Canada’s Piper Gilles and Paul Poirier skate during the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympic Games. Gilles and Poirier are two of Team Canada’s figure skaters affected by the ISU’s decision to not add an extra point to the teams below Valieva after her ban. (Justin Setterfield/Getty Images)The Canadian Olympic Committee says it continues to believe Canada’s figure skating team deserves the bronze medal from the 2022 Beijing Olympics, and a statement from the International Skating Union to explain its reallocation of medals following a Russian skater’s doping ban is insufficient.
The ISU decided that Russia should drop from the gold-medal position to bronze despite the disqualification of Kamila Valieva. Canada finished fourth in the event in Beijing, behind Russia, the United States and Japan.
“We don’t believe the ISU statement provides further clarity or justification and continue to believe the Canadian team should be awarded the bronze medal following the CAS decision,” the COC said in a statement on the ISU ruling regarding the Beijing 2022 Olympic Winter Games figure skating team event on Friday.
“We are working closely with Skate Canada to explore our options for appeal.”
“I didn’t eat a poppy seed bagel when I was competing”
We spoke to Canadian figure skater @kmooretowers to get her perspective on the @ISU_Figure decision to disqualify Kamila Valieva from Beijing 2022, but not award Canada bronze in the team event@skate_canada pic.twitter.com/Wwo5qYv7TH
—@CBCOlympicsThe ISU published amended standings from the competition after Valieva’s ban that removed her maximum 10 points from each of her two events but did not add an extra point to the other teams below her.
In a statement Friday, the ISU said the reallocation of points could negatively affect the relative team ranking.
“We are looking at options right now and will publish our decision early next week,” a Skate Canada spokesperson said in an email.
With files from CBC Sports