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International
Olympic Committee may award an additional gold medal to Canadian
pair skaters
By
Steve Wilstein
Associated Press
SALT
LAKE CITY Two gold medals?
The
International Olympic Committee wouldnt rule out the possibility
that a second gold medal could be awarded to the Canadian pairs
skaters as a way to end the judging controversy that has marred
the sport and dominated the Winter Games.
The
IOC will consider any request from the ISU, president Jacques
Rogge said, referring to the International Skating Union.
IOC
member Kevan Gosper said the committee hasnt discussed such
a proposal, but added, Im not saying it cant happen.
The
head of the skating union said it would be very difficult,
not impossible, to award the
gold to Jamie Sale and David Pelletier, who narrowly lost to the
Russians in a questionable vote.
Nothing
is impossible, Ottavio Cinquanta told NBC Sports.
Earlier,
he rebuffed pressure to speed up a review of the judging despite
demands for action from the IOC and worries by skaters that the
controversy might taint other events.
The unions meeting is scheduled for Monday.
We
do not understand why we should be deciding something so important
as a medal in one day, Cinquanta said later Thursday while
at the mens final. We want to make the proper decision.
It is not easy.
Canadian
officials said they dont want Elena Berezhnaya and Anton Sikharulidze
stripped of the gold medal, but they believe Sale and Pelletier
should be rewarded if any evidence of wrongdoing is uncovered.
We
are not here to pull someone down, we are here to pull somebody
up, said Michael Chambers, president of the Canadian Olympic
Association. We see no reason why the council of the ISU should
not consider awarding a second gold medal.
French
judge Marie-Reine Le Gougne is at the center of the controversy
in Salt Lake City.
Didier
Gailhaguet, head of the French Olympic committee and the countrys
figure skating federation, told an Associated Press reporter she
was pressured before she voted for the Russians on Monday night.
During
an interview in French, he said she was somewhat manipulated,
but he denied any wrongdoing by his federation.
Some
people close to the judge have acted badly and have put someone
who is honest and upright but emotionally fragile under pressure,
Gailhaguet said Wednesday night. We cannot continue to let
our judge be lambasted in this way. What is true is that Marie-Reine
has been put under pressure, which pushed her to act in a certain
way.
But
on Thursday, Gailhaguet said his remarks had been misinterpreted.
I totally reject the interpretation placed on words attributed
to me, Gailhaguet said in a statement released by the French
National Olympic Committee. He did not elaborate.
There
was no misinterpretation on our part, AP sports editor Terry
Taylor said. Our reporter
called Gailhaguet on his cell phone, identified himself and conducted
an interview entirely in French for at least five minutes.
Le
Gougne is one of five judges who favored the Russians despite the
couples obvious technical error. That was enough for a 5-4
decision.
She
voted along with majority, which included former Eastern bloc members
Russia, Poland, Ukraine and China.
International
Skating Union rules prevent judges from commenting publicly about
decisions. Le Gougne refused to accept calls to her hotel..
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