Current:Home > StocksJordan Chiles deserved Olympic bronze medal. And so much more -ProgressCapital
Jordan Chiles deserved Olympic bronze medal. And so much more
View
Date:2025-04-18 08:18:22
Promising as the video evidence backing Jordan Chiles’ claim to her bronze medal is, it never should have come to this.
And nothing can ever undo the damage that’s been done or the heartache she’s suffered.
Her bronze medal on floor exercise at the Paris Games should be the crowning personal achievement of Chiles’ career, her first individual medal in two Olympic appearances. Instead, it’s been tainted by legal wranglings and online abuse, her joy and pride now forever colored by disappointment and hurt.
All because other people, people whose jobs it is to know better, screwed up in almost every way imaginable.
The International Gymnastics Federation. The Court of Arbitration for Sport. Even Romanian officials, who trampled over Chiles in their zeal to get for their athletes something they did not deserve.
Chiles and her coach followed the rules, as the video submitted with her appeal filed Monday so clearly shows. Yet Chiles is the one who’s been punished, stripped of her medal — for now — not because of anything she did but because of the incompetence and ineptitude of others.
“Jordan Chiles’ appeals present the international community with an easy legal question — will everyone stand by while an Olympic athlete who has done only the right thing is stripped of her medal because of fundamental unfairness in an ad-hoc arbitration process? The answer to that question should be no,” Maurice M. Suh, counsel for Chiles, said in the statement Monday announcing her appeal to the Swiss Federal Tribunal.
“Every part of the Olympics, including the arbitration process, should stand for fair play.”
And nothing about this process has been fair.
Chiles initially finished fifth in the floor exercise, her score of 13.666 putting her behind Romanians Ana Barbosu and Sabrina Maneca-Voineau. (The Romanians had identical scores of 13.7, but Barbosu placed higher because of a better execution score.) But Cecile Landi, who is Chiles’ personal coach in addition to being the U.S. coach in Paris, appealed her difficulty score, arguing Chiles had not been given full credit for a tour jete, a leap.
A review panel agreed, and the additional 0.100 elevated the American ahead of both Romanians into third place.
That’s when things went sideways.
Romania appealed, submitting several different arguments before settling on the claim that Chiles’ inquiry was filed too late. The Court of Arbitration for Sport sided with the Romanians, ruling that the official timing system showed Chiles’ inquiry had been made four seconds past the 60-second deadline.
But the rules are a gymnast has 60 seconds after a score is posted to make a verbal inquiry, not that the inquiry must show up in the system within 60 seconds. That might seem like splitting hairs, but it’s not. Common sense tells you making a verbal inquiry and registering it are not simultaneous, yet the CAS ruling made the assumption they were.
We know now they were not. The video shows Landi saying, “Inquiry for Jordan!” twice within the 60-second deadline. If there was a delay in registering it, that isn't Chiles' fault and can't be held against her.
As for why CAS didn’t have that video during its hearing, add that to the list of the tribunal’s failings.
Chiles, USA Gymnastics and the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee didn’t know for three days that they were parties to the Romanians’ appeal because CAS was using either wrong or outdated emails. How this was possible, given the USOPC and CAS had been in frequent communication throughout the Games about a medals ceremony in Paris for U.S. figure skaters and the wrong emails were generating bounce-back messages, begs belief. You almost have to try to be that incompetent.
When the Americans finally were informed, it was less than 24 hours before the CAS hearing. There is no way to read the many documents in the case, analyze the arguments, craft a response and prepare for a hearing in that amount of time.
There also was no need to. Contrary to Romania’s claim about the need for a quick decision so the medals table would be accurate before the end of the Games, nothing demanded urgency in this case. The floor exercise medals had already been awarded. The gymnastics competition was over. No one’s ability to participate was at stake. There would have been no material difference in a decision made on Oct. 10 from one made on Aug. 10.
Except that maybe it would have given the CAS arbitrators time to have gotten it right. And Chiles wouldn’t have been put through an emotional wringer.
“My heart was broken,” she said last week during an appearance at the Forbes Power Women’s Summit.
This all could have been avoided. And even if Chiles does get the title of bronze medalist back, as she should, it can never make up for everything else she lost.
Follow USA TODAY Sports columnist Nancy Armour on social media @nrarmour.
veryGood! (1492)
Related
- The Best Stocking Stuffers Under $25
- BET co-founder Sheila Johnson says writing new memoir helped her heal: I've been through a lot
- UAW widening strike against GM and Stellantis
- Targeted strikes may spread to other states and cities as midday deadline set by auto workers nears
- Sarah J. Maas books explained: How to read 'ACOTAR,' 'Throne of Glass' in order.
- 'I ejected': Pilot of crashed F-35 jet in South Carolina pleads for help in phone call
- Judge blocks government plan to scale back Gulf oil lease sale to protect whale species
- Anheuser-Busch says it will stop cutting tails off famous Budweiser Clydesdale horses
- From family road trips to travel woes: Americans are navigating skyrocketing holiday costs
- USC restores reporter's access after 'productive conversation' with Lincoln Riley
Ranking
- 'No Good Deed': Who's the killer in the Netflix comedy? And will there be a Season 2?
- Thursday Night Football highlights: 49ers beat Giants for 13th straight regular-season win
- Jailhouse letter adds wrinkle in case of mom accused of killing husband, then writing kids’ book
- How The Young and the Restless Honored Late Actor Billy Miller Days After His Death
- American news website Axios laying off dozens of employees
- Hollis Watkins, who was jailed multiple times for challenging segregation in Mississippi, dies at 82
- Massachusetts has a huge waitlist for state-funded housing. So why are 2,300 units vacant?
- One TV watcher will be paid $2,500 to decide which Netflix series is most binge-worthy. How to apply.
Recommendation
Working Well: When holidays present rude customers, taking breaks and the high road preserve peace
Shimano recalls 760,000 bike cranksets over crash hazard following several injury reports
Sophie Turner Says She Had Argument With Joe Jonas on His Birthday Before He Filed for Divorce
Hero or villain? Rupert Murdoch’s exit stirs strong feelings in Britain, where he upended the media
New Orleans mayor’s former bodyguard making first court appearance after July indictment
Hawaii economists say Lahaina locals could be priced out of rebuilt town without zoning changes
Tennessee judges side with Nashville in fight over fairgrounds speedway
Fatal collision that killed 2 pilots brings a tragic end to the Reno air show and confounds experts