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What is behind the Olympics figure skating furor?
By David Walsh
19 February 2002
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The most striking aspect of the furor over the Olympics pairs
figure skating medal is the disparity between the intrinsic significance
of the incident that sparked the flap and the media/political
uproar it provoked. The affair has shed light on two interrelated
phenomena: the degraded state of the Olympics and the poisoned
state of international political relations.
The sports story is clear enough. On February 11, by a 5-4
decision, judges awarded the gold medal in the pairs figure skating
competition to Russians Elena Berezhnaya and Anton Sikharulidze,
and the silver to Canadians Jamie Salé and David Pelletier.
As has often been the case in Olympics figure skating, the
competition was very close, with two highly talented and skilled
pairs delivering excellent performances. Given the nature of the
sport, there is always room for conflicting evaluations. Unlike
speed events or team contests such as ice hockey, the measure
of excellence is not entirely objective, and judges must take
into account such matters as artistic merit, originality and gracefulness.
There have been many occasions in past Games when the judges
decision left many viewers and even expert commentators unsatisfied.
Moreover, political factors and national rivalries have long
played a role in the judging of figure skating at the Games. Throughout
the Cold War it was routine for judges from the Soviet bloc to
give higher marks to their skaters, and their counterparts
from the West to do the same for skaters from countries allied
to the US.
But never before has a controversial verdict provoked a media-driven
storm of protest like that which unfolded last week, or a public
campaign to overturn the judges ruling.
In its campaign in support of the Canadian pair, the US media,
led by the broadcaster of the Games, NBC, threw all pretense of
journalistic impartiality out the window. NBC television commentators
Scott Hamilton and Sandra Bezic (a former Canadian pairs medalist
openly rooting for the Canadian skaters) exultantly declared that
the Canadians had won the gold before the latter had even left
the ice. They expressed outrage over the judges verdict.
How did this happen? demanded Hamilton. Bezic told
the viewing audience she was ashamed for our sport.
This became the opening shot in a raucous drive to reverse
the judges decision. Throughout the week the American and
Canadian media were unrelenting in their attacks, directed in
the first instance against the French judge who cast the swing
vote tipping the verdict in favor of the Russian pair. There were
allegations that she had caved in to pressure from French skating
officials to vote for the Russians in the figure skating event,
in return for a vote by the Russian judge for the French pair
in the upcoming ice dance event.
World shares our anger, proclaimed the February
13 Toronto Star. But the Canadian press acknowledged that
the Americans have led the international outcry, and
indeed, the US media, which speaks (or bellows) with a considerably
louder voice, adopted the Canadian skaters as its own. NBCs
own commentators, including the Today Shows highly
paid and highly irritating Matt Lauer and Katie Couric, did everything
they could to keep the pot boiling. The networks heated
and slanted coverage of the figure skating controversy was in
keeping with its overall presentation of the Olympicsjingoistic
and simplistic to the point of being unwatchable.
In the face of this blitz, the International Olympic Committee
(IOC) executive began publicly pressuring the International Skating
Union (ISU) to come up with an immediate solution that would appease
the Americans and their Canadian allies. IOC President Jacques
Rogge of Belgium accused the ISU of dragging its feet in the affair.
Commentators noted that Rogges position would lead
to charges that the IOC is catering unfairly to North American
athletes in an attempt to appease sponsors and television rights
holders, who pay the bulk of the Olympic corporate freight
(New York Times).
The ISU was meanwhile proceeding with a degree of caution,
promising to meet and discuss the matter on February 18. The ISU
head pointed out that some of its delegates had not yet arrived
in Salt Lake City, and that there had been no opportunity to investigate
the charges of fraud.
The skating union was carrying out an investigation, but,
according to the Times, not nearly quickly enough
to satisfy senior members of the Olympic committee [IOC], who
have pressed the union through a letter Wednesday [February 13]
and strong words today [February 14] to get the mess resolved
quickly.
Bowing to the pressure from the IOC, US and Canadian officials
and the North American media, the ISU held an extraordinary midnight
meeting on February 14 at which a majority of its delegates voted
to award a second gold medal to Salé and Pelletier and
to suspend French judge Marie Reine Le Gougne for misconduct.
Le Gougne was disciplined, according to the ISU, for failing to
report, prior to the figure skating event, attempts to influence
her vote.
Le Gougne maintains that she was not giving into pressure when
she voted for Berezhnaya and Sikharulidze. She told the French
sports daily, LEquipe, I judged in my soul
and conscience.... I considered the Russians were the best.
She also spoke of the atmosphere created by the media campaign.
I felt threatened physically, she said. And
that continued inside the shuttle and when I reached the hotel.
Le Gougne asserts that a British ISU official assailed me,
scolding me for having voted for the Russians.
The awarding of a second gold medal was front-page news in
most US newspapers and the first item on the evening television
reports. The news was greeted with a banner headline stretching
across four columns of the February 16 New York Times.
The newspaper devoted its two lead articles to the issue, with
another two pages worth of reports further back in the edition.
The Times, which ran dozens of articles about the controversy,
editorialized twice in the course of the week about the
figure skating competition, declaring the gold medal awarded to
the Russian pair an injustice.
The Russian media and political establishment likewise plunged
into the fray. Deputy Prime Minister Valentina Matviyenko called
the controversy an unscrupulous row which should not be
in the spirit of the Olympic movement. President Vladimir
Putin weighed in by sending Berezhnaya and Sikharulidze a telegram
congratulating them on their brilliant victory. The
February 15 edition of Izvestiya ran a headline, By
Crook or by Hook, America demands That Our Only Olympic Medal
Be Taken Away.
It is impossible, based on publicly available information,
to sort out the conflicting charges and make an objective determination
as to whether the judges verdict in the February 11 pairs
event was tainted. Nor is it a question of being for
or against the Canadian or Russian pair. There are
undoubtedly valid arguments on both sides of that issue. For the
most part, moreover, the skaters themselves have behaved rather
well. They have not been the main instigators of the furor.
One thing is certain: the unseemly manner in which the dispute
has been handled, with arm twisting from the IOC and a resultant
rush to judgment, can only impede a serious investigation into
the charges of rigged marks. If, indeed, the French judge agreed
to a swap with the Russians, or in some other way allowed her
vote to be influenced by outside pressure, she has committed a
serious offense and should be barred from the sport, and perhaps
prosecuted for fraud. But neither that question, nor many others,
could possibly be properly examined in the time that has lapsed
since the disputed event, especially given the heated and poisoned
atmosphere created by an unscrupulous and sensationalist media.
Who tried to pressure Le Gougne? Was she the only one? Is it
possible she did not report such an attempt, if it occurred, because
such things are commonplace? What role have corporate and media
interests played, if any, in attempting to influence the outcome
of Olympic events?
The proceedings of the past week were clearly not motivated
by a determination on the part of the IOC executive to get to
the truth and root out corruption. On the contrary, they have
been conducive to a cover-up.
Beyond the question of the functioning of Olympics officials,
there is a more basic question: what accounts for the transformation
of a disputed call in a sports event into a political controversy
of international dimensions?
The shocked tones of the commentators when they discuss the
possibility that politics and corruption might have had something
to do with the outcome of the skating event are disingenuous to
the point of absurdity. The Olympic Games are principally about
politics, nationalism and big business.
Crass commercialism played a major role in fueling the media
frenzy over the figure skating event. NBC, in particular, had
a monetary stake in its outcome. The network, which has made a
huge investment in obtaining the rights to broadcast the Games,
had heavily promoted the Canadian pair, featuring them in their
promotion for the Olympics. Ratings for the Games had languished
prior to the February 11 pairs competition. It would not be beyond
the network moguls to ignite a public scandal in order to drive
up the ratings and boost advertising revenues.
One commentator has called the Games part of the sport-media
complex. The price tag for the Summer Games is now above
$2 billion. The IOC stands to receive more than $3.5 billion in
television-rights fees from NBC for games through 2008. Corporations
pay at least $40 million each to be official Olympic sponsors
over a four-year period.
This years Games have been dubbed by some the Bribery
Olympics. Revelations that cash payments and other benefits were
provided to IOC members to influence their vote to award the 2002
Olympic Games to Salt Lake City forced the resignation of the
leaders of the citys organizing committee in early 1999.
But commercialism alone cannot explain the extraordinary, even
bizarre dimensions of the figure skating uproar. Even more decisive
is the malignant state of international political relations, which
found a peculiar expression in the dispute over the pairs event.
That incident became a prism through which the embittered and
tense relations between the US and Europe, especially France,
and the US and Russia were refracted.
The normal protocols of the Olympics were ripped apart under
conditions of an unprecedented eruption of American militarism
and jingoism. The Bush administration and the US media have been
shameless in exploiting the Salt Lake City Games to promote Washingtons
drive for global hegemony, packaged for public consumption as
a war on terrorism launched in response to the events
of September 11.
The belligerent and reckless stance of the Bush administration
has increasingly shocked and angered the Europeans. It is no secret
that many in the Bush administration look on the French government
as a leftist fifth column, and many within the French establishment
consider the present US government a threat to their own imperialist
interests. There are similar feelings of resentment between Washington
and Moscow.
American chauvinism is increasingly an object of scorn and
hatred throughout the world. A column in the Sydney Morning
Herald commented harshly on the February 8 opening ceremony
of the Salt Lake City games. It noted that The Iranian team
marched out in the Parade of Nations to be greeted by American
broadcaster NBC referring to the athletes as part of President
Bushs axis of evil.... The Mormon Tabernacle
Choir could well have begun the national anthem with, Oh
say can you see ... the biggest display of nationalism since Berlin
in 1936. NBC made frequent crosses to American troops in
Kandahar, Afghanistan, who pointed to the American flag on their
military uniforms and chanted, U-S-A.
No one has come out of the skating medal furor unsullied: not
the IOC, the ISU, the various skating federations, nor, of course,
the North American media. The Olympic Games themselves have been
irreparably polluted by commercialism, greed, political interest
and chauvinist hysteria.
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