USA TODAY US Edition

IOC has precedent to hand out two bronzes

- Christine Brennan

PARIS – In stripping Jordan Chiles of her bronze medal, the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee is not following the precedent it set in the most publicized double-medal controvers­y in history.

At the 2002 Salt Lake City Olympics, in what became known as the French judge scandal, the IOC gave out two gold medals – to Canada and Russia – rather than take the gold medal from the Russian pairs skaters nearly a week after they received it, as it should have.

At the time, the Olympic figure skating saga had captured global attention and overshadow­ed practicall­y everything else at those Olympics. So the IOC and Internatio­nal Skating Union wanted to end it as quickly as possible with a resolution that pleased as many people as possible, hence the double gold medals in a second medal ceremony six days after the first, in the same place, on the ice in the skating venue.

An emailed request for comment to IOC spokesman Mark Adams about why the IOC isn’t doing the same thing with the gymnastics controvers­y was not immediatel­y answered Sunday afternoon.

At the 2002 Winter Games, Russians Elena Berezhnaya and Anton Sikharulid­ze won the gold medal on the night of Feb. 11 over Canadians Jamie Sale and David Pelletier even though the Russians had made a mistake in their long program while the Canadians had not.

A few hours later, USA TODAY Sports reported that the French judge, MarieReine Le Gougne, broke down in the lobby of her hotel and told her fellow skating judges that she had been forced to put the Russian pair first in a backroom deal to get the Russian judge’s vote for the French team in the ice dancing competitio­n later in the Olympics.

The next day, the ISU announced that it would conduct an investigat­ion into the matter, leading to the eventual suspension of both Le Gougne and French federation president Didier Gailhaguet.

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