China promises clampdown on “age cheats”

(Reuters) – Chinese officials insist tough new eligibility rules will put a stop to the type of “age cheat” scandal that saw a gymnast stripped of her Olympic medal.

Dong Fangxiao had to return her women’s gymnastics team bronze medal from the 2000 Sydney Olympics earlier this year following an International Olympic Committee (IOC) probe.

Chinese sports officials promised that tighter checks introduced after the scandal would eradicate the problem.

China’s delegation chief for next month’s Youth Olympic Games in Singapore said the country had adopted a zero tolerance policy toward potential cheats.

“We’ve scrutinized every athlete’s age for the Youth Olympic Games to make sure there is no one going to Singapore with a fake age,” Cai Zhenhua told Thursday’s China Daily.

“We have to make our Chinese delegation very clean and transparent. This is for the benefit of the athletes and the fair play spirit of the Olympics.”

The inaugural Youth Olympics in Singapore begin on August 14 and showcases potential future senior Olympic athletes aged from 14 to 18.

Stringent documentation checks on China’s 70-strong squad have been carried out in addition to X-ray bone analysis on the team’s under-16s, Cai added.

Suspicions of age-faking have dogged Chinese sport for years.

Dong registered different ages at Sydney and the 2008 Beijing Games, where she served as a technical official.

Her five team mates — Yang Yun, Liu Xuan, Ling Jie, Huang Mandan, Kui Yuanyuan — also lost their medals.

At the 2008 Beijing Olympics, China’s He Kexin, a women’s team and uneven bars gold medalist, was also investigated but subsequently passed as eligible.

(Reporting by Alastair Himmer in Tokyo. Editing by Peter Rutherford)

Gymnastics-China promises clampdown on ‘age cheats’

July 29 (Reuters) – Chinese officials insist tough new eligibility rules will put a stop to the type of “age cheat” scandal that saw a gymnast stripped of her Olympic medal.

Dong Fangxiao had to return her women’s gymnastics team bronze medal from the 2000 Sydney Olympics earlier this year following an International Olympic Committee (IOC) probe.

Chinese sports officials promised that tighter checks introduced after the scandal would eradicate the problem.

China’s delegation chief for next month’s Youth Olympic Games in Singapore said the country had adopted a zero tolerance policy towards potential cheats.

“We’ve scrutinised every athlete’s age for the Youth Olympic Games to make sure there is no one going to Singapore with a fake age,” Cai Zhenhua told Thursday’s China Daily.

“We have to make our Chinese delegation very clean and transparent. This is for the benefit of the athletes and the fair play spirit of the Olympics.”

The inaugural Youth Olympics in Singapore begin on Aug. 14 and showcases potential future senior Olympic athletes aged from 14 to 18.

Stringent documentation checks on China’s 70-strong squad have been carried out in addition to X-ray bone analysis on the team’s under-16s, Cai added.

Suspicions of age-faking have dogged Chinese sport for years.

Dong registered different ages at Sydney and the 2008 Beijing Games, where she served as a technical official.

Her five team mates — Yang Yun, Liu Xuan, Ling Jie, Huang Mandan, Kui Yuanyuan — also lost their medals.

At the 2008 Beijing Olympics, China’s He Kexin, a women’s team and uneven bars gold medallist, was also investigated but subsequently passed as eligible.

(Reporting by Alastair Himmer in Tokyo. Editing by Peter Rutherford. To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

Ministry seeks meeting with IOC president

The Sports Ministry has sought an early meeting with International Olympic Committee president Jacques Rogge to solve what it described as a “false situation of crisis” created by the Indian Olympic Association and various national sports federations.

In another letter to Rogge, Joint Secretary Injeti Srinivas asked for an immediate meeting to clear the air, adding that the government has not received copy of the IOC letter in which the world body threatened to take up the issue in its Executive Board meeting next nonth. “We are confident that the IOC will acquaint itself with the full facts before forming any view in the present case. We expect that our meeting with you can be scheduled early to enable a comprehensive appreciation of the entire matter,” Srinivas said.

Indirectly targetting IOA secretary general Randhir Singh, also an IOC member, the Ministry accused him of trying to mislead the committee. “It is unfortunate that the IOC member from India has not even cared to consult us before taking up this matter with you,” Srinivas said.

The Ministry also accused the IOA officials of creating this crisis only to protect their interests. “This an attempt to create a false situation of crisis, by a few interested persons, whose only aim is to protect their unduly long tenures in the IOA and the NSFs (National Sports Federations),” Srinivas said.

In the letter, the ministry also cited government sports regulations in countries like the USA and Malaysia to assert that ensuring accountability of NSFs was not a violation of the Olympic charter. It also alleged that being an IOC member and an Olympic Council of Asia General Secretary, Randhir is well aware of the regulations internationally but has kept the IOC in dark about the scenario in India.

“He is fully aware of the proceedings before the Delhi High Court, as IOA is a respondent, in the ongoing Public Interest Litigation. Further, as the Secretary General of OCA, he is conversant with the sports legislations of Malaysia and Sri Lanka,” the letter said. “However, it appears that IOC has not been apprised by him of the national (in this case Indian) perspective in its entirety, thereby exposing his conflict of interest as well, since he has been holding the post of Secretary General, IOA for over two decades,” Srinivas wrote.

The ministry said it has gone through the sports regulations in 30 countries before formulating the guidelines. “We have carefully studied sports regulations prevalent in more than 30 countries, including USA, France, Italy, Hungary, Mauritius, Malaysia and Sri Lanka. These countries have enacted sports legislations, which contain several mandatory provisions that their sports federations have to conform, to obtain recognition and financial support from the government,” the ministry letter added.

The ministry said instead of rejecting the guidelines, the IOA and NSF administrators should focus on preparing for the Commonwealth Games here this October. “The Government is providing full administrative and financial support to the Organising Committee for staging the Games successfully. It is critical that, at this time, all our sports bodies focus on the Games, which is their primary duty.”

Randhir refutes allegations

Meanwhile, Randhir Singh, when contacted, said there was no need for him to consult the government, adding that his visit to the IOC headquarters in Lausanne was to attend a couple of meetings and not to discuss the issue. “I’m rather surprised by the Ministry view that I should have discussed the issue with them. The Ministry did not consult us (IOA) before issuing the guidelines, why should we consult them?” Randhir said.

IOC sends another warning letter to sports ministry

The ongoing spat between the government and Indian Olympic Association president Suresh Kalmadi and other sports administrators could snowball into a situation where the country may see itself being thrown out of the Olympic family by next month, thus jeopardising India’s participation in the Singapore Youth Olympics, the Asian Games in Guangzhou and even the Commonwealth Games in October.

The International Olympic Committee (IOC) shot out a warning letter to sports minister MS Gill on Friday over limiting office tenures of IOA and federation administrators.

The letter cautioned the ministry against going ahead with their May 1 decision to regulate tenures, which goes against the Olympic Charter, and reitered the possibility of sanctions. If the ministry went ahead with its guidelines, said the letter, the issue would be referred to the IOC executive board meeting in June and may lead to India’s suspension or de-recognition from the Olympic family.

“…We would like to remind you, once more, that in the event where the directives issued by the Ministry of Youth Affairs and Sports would be imposed on the Olympic Movement in India (even for future elections) we would be forced to report this case to the next IOC executive board meeting (in June) according to the rules of the Olympic Charter,” the letter said.

Friday’s letter is in response to the May 12 correspondence by joint secretary to the sports minister, Injeti Srinivas, to the IOC, where the ministry said that the guidelines would not affect the current office-bearers of the IOA and NSFs and would be effective for future elections only.

The joint letter has been copied to IOC president Jacques Rogge, OCA president Sheikh Ahmad Al-Sabah, IOC member and IOA secretary general Randhir Singh and the Commonwealth Games Federation.

Talking to The Sunday Express from Lausanne, Randhir Singh called the ministry’s decision a “big setback” and an attempt to discredit India’s image in the international sports arena. “At a time when India is emerging as a sports power, we expect the ministry to be supportive rather than sully the image of India internationally,” he said.

Resolve issue ourselves: Gill

MEANWHILE, reacting to the letter, sports minister Gill said that the issue should be resolved within the country. “I have got the (IOC) letter and I can’t understand why it is being written again and again. This is an issue amongst ourselves and should be resolved within the country,” he said.

“There should be a limit on the tenure and age (of sports bosses). I have not brought a new guideline. I have only revived the 1975 guideline. The IOA should respect the opinion of the people of this country,” he added.

No changes of my own in adopting new regulations restricting officials” tenure: Gill

New Delhi, May 4 (ANI): Union Minister of Youth Affairs and Sports M S Gill on Tuesday said he has made no changes of his own in adopting the new regulations, which limit the tenure of sports administrators.

Gill said his ministry has only restored the regulation of the ”1975 Indira Gandhi Government” and that he has made no changes of his own in the new regulation.

“In the time of Mrs. Indira Gandhi, 74-75, these regulations were issued by the education sports ministry limiting terms among other things for better management and promotion of sports in India, that is the fundamental objective,” said Gill.

“These had been set-aside in a casual order in August 2002 by the then minister with no reasoning really and we have restored the regulations of 74-75. I have made no regulations of my own,” he added.

Gill further said that his ministry has relaxed the norm in accordance with the International Olympic Committee (IOC) regulations, to allow National Sports Federation (NSF) Presidents to continue for 12 years, instead of the eight suggested by the original 1975 guideline.

“We have done so because we have studied the International Olympic Committee (IOC) regulations, we have in fact softened these regulations. They said two terms and then a break. The International Olympic Committee says 12 years for the president total and an age limit of 70,” said Gill.

“We said we would go with that. So now 12 years. But if somebody wants 12×30, 30×40, I have nothing to say on that,” he added.

Gill added that the new regulation has got nothing to do with the Commonwealth Games and that all office bearers should continue with their term until next elections.

“This has no impact on the Commonwealth Games. Nothing to do with them. We have also made it clear that all office bearers do their work, carry on their term as and when future elections come, which are mainly in 2012, 13 and so on and so forth,” he noted.

The Sports Ministry released an order on Sunday according to which the maximum tenure of the President of a National Sports Federation shall be 12 years, with or without a break.

And for the secretary and the treasurer, the tenure shall not be more than two successive tenures of four years each, the order said.

However, the regulation has been opposed by many sports office bearers, who questioned its timing since it came barely five months before the 2010 Commonwealth Games. (ANI)

China accepts IOC”s decision to take back Olympics medal

Beijing, Apr 30 (ANI): The Chinese Olympic Committee (COC) has said it respects the International Olympic Committee”s (IOC) decision of stripping its women”s team of a bronze medal won at the 2000 Sydney Olympics.

The decision to strip the women”s team of the medal was taken after one of its athletes, Dong Fangxiao, was found to be under age.

“The Chinese Olympic Committee has always been committed to safeguarding the fair-play principle in sports and has always ordered its athletes and officials to comply with all rules and regulations of the relevant international federations,” said a COC statement.

“The COC has learnt a lesson and will endeavor to prevent a repeat of such incidents in future,” the statement added.

”A spokesman for the Chinese Gymnastics Association (CGA), who asked not to be named, said: “The CGA is consistent with the International Gymnastics Federation (FIG) in the fight against unsportsmanship behaviors such as age falsification,” adding that the CGA accepts the penalty,” reports the Xinhua.

“The CGA would follow the IOC decision,” he added.

The International Gymnastics Federation (FIG) conducted an inquiry in February this year, which showed that Dong was only 14 years old during the Sydney Games.

The FIG qualification rules for these Games required that an athlete should be at least 16 years old in the year of the Olympic Games. (ANI)

London Olympics avoid being drawn into UK vote

Preparations for the London 2012 Olympics have not been dragged into the bitter election campaigning in Britain, with organisers confident of continued good relations with the party that wins next week’s polls.

“The Olympic Games have not tumbled from the lips of a single politician during this campaign,” London Games chief Sebastian Coe told a small group of reporters on Thursday. “They have not become a political football.”

Britain is holding a parliamentary election on May 6, with the ruling Labour Party trailing the main opposition Conservatives in the polls, hinting at a potential change in the country’s leadership two years before the Olympics.

Coe said while the outcome was as yet unknown, preparations would continue as planned, with no single day to waste.

“There is no certainty of outcome but we will go on delivering seamlessly with whatever the political landscape looks like,” Coe said after presenting a progress update to the International Olympic Committee.

Coe, himself a former conservative member of parliament, said the Games had stayed out of the political arena thanks to the organisers’ work on obtaining cross-party support.

Coe said even a change in the leadership of the Olympic ministry would not affect them.

“Those are political decisions but what we are focusing on is delivering and letting all political parties know what the progress is,” he said.

“We understand that whoever nudges across the line will face the bleakest outlook of public expenditure in a generation,” Coe a former Olympic middle distance champion, said.

IOC SATISFACTION

IOC chief Jacques Rogge gave London a thumbs up, saying there was no specific single problem with preparations.

“We have discussed the possibility of a change of government and we are absolutely at ease there,” Rogge told reporters.

“There is a multi-party support (for the Games) in the United Kingdom,” he said, adding the IOC was equally comfortable with preparations. “We have no earmarked challenges for London. Nothing specific,” he said.

Coe said organisers would also “very soon” finalise their venue plan with the relocation of rhythmic gymnastics and badminton.

He also said organisers would unveil the mascot of the Games well before July 27, two years to the day of the Games opening, with sales to start on that day.

The IOC caught a first glimpse of the tightly-guarded secret and approved it on Thursday. Coe refused, however, to reveal any details other than the IOC liking what they saw.

“Yes they did see it,” Coe said, adding they had also presented “the narrative behind it” and that the mascot had already gone into production.

(Editing by John O’Brien and Justin Palmer; To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

Fasel sorry for conflict of interest ‘mistake’

International Ice Hockey Federation chief Rene Fasel has admitted “making a mistake” after being reprimanded by the International Olympic Committee for a conflict of interest over broadcasting rights.

Fasel escaped a more serious punishment on Wednesday and was allowed to keep his IOC posts after he helped a friend win a contract with the company controlling the IIHF’s TV and marketing rights.

“I accept the reprimand and I take note of it,” Fasel told agency reporters on Thursday. “It was poor judgement. I made a mistake… I do not feel well about it.”

Fasel, an IOC Executive Board member, also heads the Association of International Olympic Winter Sports Federations and chaired the IOC’s coordination commission for the Vancouver 2010 winter Games.

Fasel’s punishment, despite his senior position, is lighter than in the most recent cases, where less senior members were reprimanded and banned from sitting on any IOC commission for five years.

The IOC has said Fasel helped his friend’s company clinch a deal with the company controlling the rights and was also ‘personally’ involved in various marketing contract negotiations and creating opportunities in the Asian broadcasting market.

He denied taking any money for his mediating role, a claim backed by the results of an investigation.

IOC chief Jacque Rogge defended the organisation’s decision, seen by some as too light for such a senior member, saying while Fasel had tarnished the image of the movement, he had not made money from his involvement.

“Mr Fasel did not commit financial irregularities but Mr Fasel made a mistake to support a personal friend in having a contract with the broadcasting company,” Rogge told reporters.

“(The investigators’) report was very clear that Mr Fasel did not benefit personally. However he has tarnished the reputation of the IOC and got a reprimand,” he said.

The decision comes just days before the start of the ice hockey world championships on May 7.

(Editing by Justin Palmer, To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

Stick to the construction timetable, IOC urges Sochi

Organisers of the Sochi 2014 winter Olympics were urged on Thursday to keep up their construction pace as Europe’s largest building site is still a long way away from resembling an Olympic city.

Sochi, which won the Games in 2007 with the majority of its venues needed to be built from scratch, has pledged to start construction of every venue by the end of this year.

It has also got to build sufficient accommodation for visitors and working staff, the IOC said.

“We are happy to see the progress… mainly in the field of construction,” Gilbert Felli, the International Olympic Committee’s Games Executive Director told reporters.

“But this project is a huge project. The timing is always something we are scrutinising very carefully. We are happy with the deadlines but there is still a lot to do.

He said organisers must meet the volume of necessary accommodation for visitors, workers as well as athletes and officials while also moving more organisation staff from Moscow to Sochi “to be hands-on on the preparations.”

The IOC earlier on Thursday was briefed on the progress by Sochi Games chief Dmitry Chernyshenko who confirmed that an ally of Russia’s Prime Minister Vladimir Putin would become the new Russian Olympic chief.

Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Zhukov, the government’s point man for the Sochi Games preparations, will replace Leonid Tyagachyov, who resigned as Russian Olympic chief following the country’s worst ever showing at February’s Vancouver Olympics.

“Zhukov is the only candidate,” Chernyshenko told reporters, adding he would be appointed ROC chief on May 20 but would also remain as head of Sochi’s supervisory board.

“It is a unique model of a lack of conflict of interest,” Chernyshenko said.

(Editing by Justin Palmer; To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

‘Pained’ China accepts Sydney medal loss

China was ‘pained’ by the loss of a women’s gymnastics team bronze medal from the Sydney Olympics but respected the decision to withdraw it after team member Dong Fangxiao was adjudged to have lied about her age.

The International Olympic Committee (IOC) asked for the medal to be returned on Wednesday after an International Gymnastics Federation (FIG) probe into Dong’s age concluded she had been younger than the minimum age requirement of 16 in 2000.

“The Chinese Gymnastics Association respects the decision of IOC and will actively cooperate with the IOC to deal with this issue according to relevant regulations and requirements,” a spokesman told the Xinhua news agency.

“We feel deeply pained by it. We will take it as a lesson to learn, and furthermore will comprehensively intensify the all round management over the athletes to firmly prevent similar things happening.”

In a separate statement, the Chinese Olympic Committee (COC) wholeheartedly endorsed the decision.

“The COC requires Chinese sports associations to regulate and intensify their education on rules, to take this case as a lesson to learn and resolutely prevent similar cases from happening.”

Dong registered different ages at Sydney and the 2008 Beijing Games, where she served as a technical official. Her five team mates — Yang Yun, Liu Xuan, Ling Jie, Huang Mandan, Kui Yuanyuan — will also lose their medals.

The CGA also suggested that frequent changes to the FIG’s age eligibility rules had contributed to the problem.

“The FIG continuously changes the rule of age limit, which requires us to update the information in time and keep strict monitoring and careful supervision. Any carelessness would cause problems,” said the CGA spokesman.

Suspicions of age faking have dogged Chinese sport for years.

The FIG also investigated Yang, who also won a bronze in the uneven bars in Sydney, but found there was insufficient evidence to prove age fraud and she was let off with a warning.

The case against Yang, the wife of China’s three-time Olympic champion Yang Wei, was triggered when she admitted on Chinese television before the Beijing Games that she had been 14 when she competed at Sydney.

During the 2008 Beijing Olympics, the FIG was ordered by the IOC to investigate the age of China’s He Kexin, women’s team and uneven bars gold medallist.

He was subsequently declared eligible by the FIG two months after she and her team mates won China’s first ever Olympic team gold in women’s gymnastics.

(Reporting by Nick Mulvenney and Liu Zhen; Editing by Justin Palmer; To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

‘Pained’ China accepts Sydney gymnastics medal loss

China was ‘pained’ by the loss of a women’s gymnastics team bronze medal from the Sydney Olympics but respected the decision to withdraw it after team member Dong Fangxiao was adjudged to have lied about her age.

The International Olympic Committee (IOC) asked for the medal to be returned on Wednesday after an International Gymnastics Federation (FIG) probe into Dong’s age concluded she had been younger than the minimum age requirement of 16 in 2000.

“The Chinese Gymnastics Association respects the decision of IOC and will actively cooperate with the IOC to deal with this issue according to relevant regulations and requirements,” a spokesman told the Xinhua news agency.

“We feel deeply pained by it. We will take it as a lesson to learn, and furthermore will comprehensively intensify the all round management over the athletes to firmly prevent similar things happening.”

Dong registered different ages at Sydney and the 2008 Beijing Games, where she served as a technical official.

Her five team mates — Yang Yun, Liu Xuan, Ling Jie, Huang Mandan, Kui Yuanyuan — will also lose their medals.

Suspicions of age faking have dogged Chinese sport for a number of years.

The FIG also investigated Yang, who also won a bronze in the uneven bars in Sydney, but found there was insufficient evidence to prove age fraud and she was let off with a warning.

The case against Yang, the wife of China’s three-time Olympic champion Yang Wei, was triggered when she admitted on Chinese television before the Beijing Games that she had been 14 when she competed at Sydney.

During the 2008 Beijing Olympics, the FIG was ordered by the IOC to investigate the age of China’s He Kexin, women’s team and uneven bars gold medallist.

He, along with team mates Jiang Yuyuan, Yang Yilin, Li Shanshan and Deng Linlin, were subsequently declared eligible by the FIG two months after they won China’s first ever Olympic team gold in women’s gymnastics.

(Reporting by Nick Mulvenney and Liu Zhen; Editing by John O’Brien; To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

London Games avoids being drawn into UK election – Coe

Preparations for the London 2012 Olympics have not been dragged into the bitter election campaigning in Britain, with organisers confident of continued good relations with the party that wins next week’s polls.

“The Olympic Games have not tumbled from the lips of a single politician during this campaign,” London Games chief Sebastian Coe told a small group of reporters. “They have not become a political football.”

Britain is holding a parliamentary election on May 6, with the ruling Labour Party trailing the main opposition Conservatives in the polls, hinting at a potential change in the country’s leadership two years before the Olympics.

Coe said while the outcome was as yet unknown, preparations would continue as planned, with no single day to waste.

“There is no certainty of outcome but we will go on delivering seamlessly with whatever the political landscape looks like,” Coe said after presenting a progress update to the International Olympic Committee.

Coe, himself a former conservative member of parliament, said the Games had stayed out of the political arena thanks to the organisers’ work on obtaining cross-party support.

In the past, almost all Olympic organisers, who have seven years to prepare for the Games, have faced some form of government change during that period.

Coe said even a change in the leadership of the Olympic ministry would not affect them.

NO DELAY

“Those are political decisions but what we are focusing on is delivering and letting all political parties know what the progress is,” he said.

“We understand that whoever nudges across the line will face the bleakest outlook of public expenditure in a generation,” Coe a former Olympic middle distance champion, said.

“There can be no time to waste (with the new government). We do not adapt or tailor anything. They (political parties) are all focused on the need for an immovable deadline.”

Coe said organisers would also “very soon” finalise their venue plan with the relocation of rhythmic gymnastics and badminton.

He also said organisers would unveil the mascot of the Games well before July 27, two years to the day of the Games opening, with sales to start on that day.

The IOC caught a first glimpse of the tightly-guarded secret on Thursday. Coe refused, however, to reveal any details other than the IOC liking what they saw.

“Yes they did see it,” Coe said, adding they had also presented “the narrative behind it” and that the mascot had already gone into production.

(Editing by John O’Brien; To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

IOC strips Sydney Olympics bronze medal from China, OLY

Photo IOC strips Sydney Olympics bronze medal from China, OLY

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) The underage gymnast scandal that emerged at the Beijing Olympics is finally over, with China ordered to give back a bronze team medal it won 10 years ago in Sydney. Acting on evidence that Dong Fangxiao was only 14 at the 2000 Sydney Games, the International Olympic Committee on Wednesday ordered China to return the women’s team bronze.

It will be given to the United States instead. Gymnasts must turn 16 during the Olympic year to be eligible.

“Justice prevailed,” said Dominique Dawes, who will now have a medal from each of her three Olympics and four overall. “My teammates are very well-deserving of the bronze medal, and I’m sure each and every one of us will be thrilled.

We will cherish it.” Age falsification has been a problem in gymnastics since the 1980s, when the minimum age was raised from 14 to 15 to help protect young athletes, whose bodies are still developing, from serious injuries.

The International Gymnastics Federation raised the minimum age to its current 16 in 1997. But the issue drew worldwide attention in 2008, when media reports and Internet records suggested some of the girls on China’s team that won the gold medal at the Beijing Games could have been as young as 14.

With the controversy threatening to overshadow the final days of the Olympics, the IOC ordered the FIG to investigate. The FIG cleared the Beijing gymnasts and closed that case in October 2008 after Chinese officials provided original passports, ID cards and family registers that showed all of the gymnasts were old enough to compete.

But the FIG said it wasn’t satisfied with “the explanations and evidence provided to date” for Dong and a second Sydney gymnast, Yang Yun. “That was discussed a lot in 2000,” said Kelli Hill, the U.S. coach in 2000.

“We’d heard all of those stories back then, but we’d never had it confirmed or anything. It was just the rumor mill.

” Dong’s accreditation information for the Beijing Olympics, where she worked as a national technical official, listed her birthday as Jan. 23, 1986.

That would have made her 14 in Sydney too young to compete. Her birth date in the FIG database is listed as Jan.

20, 1983. Dong’s blog also said she was born in the Year of the Ox in the Chinese zodiac, which dates from Feb.

20, 1985, to Feb. 8, 1986.

The FIG nullified Dong’s Sydney results in February. The federation didn’t find sufficient evidence to prove Yang, who also won a bronze medal on uneven bars in 2000, was underage.

She received a warning from the FIG. Because Dong’s scores contributed to China winning the team bronze, the FIG recommended the IOC take the medal back. As expected, the IOC executive board upheld the request and formally stripped the medal on the first day of a two-day meeting in Dubai.

The IOC said Dong was also stripped of her sixth-place result in the individual floor exercises and seventh place in the vault. “Respecting the minimum age of our gymnasts remains a priority and I am committed to safeguarding the health of our athletes,” FIG president Bruno Grandi said in a statement Wednesday.

Calls to the Chinese Gymnastics Association and the media officers for the Chinese gymnastics team went unanswered. Dong now lives in New Zealand with her husband.

The IOC also told the Chinese to “ensure, by all means, that the athletes and officials of its delegation comply with all rules and regulations (of the international federation) particularly with regard to age limits.” To prevent age manipulation, the FIG last year began requiring all junior and senior gymnasts who represent their countries at most international meets to have a license.

The licenses include gymnasts’ name, sex, country and date of birth, and are their proof of age for their entire career. “We are extremely grateful that the IOC and the FIG have taken such a thorough look at the issues that were raised in Beijing,” said Steve Penny, president of USA Gymnastics.

“It serves the best interests of sports to make sure there’s always a fair field of play.” The IOC ordered China’s national Olympic committee to return the team medals “as soon as possible” so they can be reallocated to the U.S. team.

“I will say that I never imagined in all my years of gymnastics that, a decade after one of my Olympic Games, I’d actually get a medal possibly shipped to me in the mail,” Dawes said. The bronze medal should ease some of the disappointing memories from Sydney for the U.S. women.

Not only did the team Dawes, Amy Chow, Jamie Dantzscher, Kristin Maloney, Elise Ray and Tasha Schwikert leave empty-handed four years after winning gold in Atlanta, but Dantzscher’s father was seriously injured in a car crash in Sydney. There also were tensions over radical changes in how the U.S. program was structured.

“Sydney was a beautiful Olympics, they did a great job. But it was hard when people would ask, ‘What medal did you guys get?’” Schwikert said.

“It’s going to be nice to say, ‘We did get a medal. We got the bronze in Sydney.

‘” ___ AP National Writer Nancy Armour in Chicago contributed to this report.

‘Pained’ China accepts Sydney gymnastics medal loss

China was ‘pained’ by the loss of a women’s gymnastics team bronze medal from the Sydney Olympics but respected the decision to withdraw it after team member Dong Fangxiao was adjudged to have lied about her age.

The International Olympic Committee (IOC) asked for the medal to be returned on Wednesday after an International Gymnastics Federation (FIG) probe into Dong’s age concluded she had been younger than the minimum age requirement of 16 in 2000.

“The Chinese Gymnastics Association respects the decision of IOC and will actively cooperate with the IOC to deal with this issue according to relevant regulations and requirements,” a spokesman told the Xinhua news agency.

“We feel deeply pained by it. We will take it as a lesson to learn, and furthermore will comprehensively intensify the all round management over the athletes to firmly prevent similar things happening.”

Dong registered different ages at Sydney and the 2008 Beijing Games, where she served as a technical official.

Her five team mates — Yang Yun, Liu Xuan, Ling Jie, Huang Mandan, Kui Yuanyuan — will also lose their medals.

Suspicions of age faking have dogged Chinese sport for a number of years.

The FIG also investigated Yang, who also won a bronze in the uneven bars in Sydney, but found there was insufficient evidence to prove age fraud and she was let off with a warning.

The case against Yang, the wife of China’s three-time Olympic champion Yang Wei, was triggered when she admitted on Chinese television before the Beijing Games that she had been 14 when she competed at Sydney.

During the 2008 Beijing Olympics, the FIG was ordered by the IOC to investigate the age of China’s He Kexin, women’s team and uneven bars gold medallist.

He, along with team mates Jiang Yuyuan, Yang Yilin, Li Shanshan and Deng Linlin, were subsequently declared eligible by the FIG two months after they won China’s first ever Olympic team gold in women’s gymnastics.

(Reporting by Nick Mulvenney and Liu Zhen; Editing by John O’Brien; To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

London Games avoids being drawn into UK election – Coe

Preparations for the London 2012 Olympics have not been dragged into the bitter election campaigning in Britain, with organisers confident of continued good relations with the party that wins next week’s polls.

“The Olympic Games have not tumbled from the lips of a single politician during this campaign,” London Games chief Sebastian Coe told a small group of reporters. “They have not become a political football.”

Britain is holding a parliamentary election on May 6, with the ruling Labour Party trailing the main opposition Conservatives in the polls, hinting at a potential change in the country’s leadership two years before the Olympics.

Coe said while the outcome was as yet unknown, preparations would continue as planned, with no single day to waste.

“There is no certainty of outcome but we will go on delivering seamlessly with whatever the political landscape looks like,” Coe said after presenting a progress update to the International Olympic Committee.

Coe, himself a former conservative member of parliament, said the Games had stayed out of the political arena thanks to the organisers’ work on obtaining cross-party support.

In the past, almost all Olympic organisers, who have seven years to prepare for the Games, have faced some form of government change during that period.

Coe said even a change in the leadership of the Olympic ministry would not affect them.

NO DELAY

“Those are political decisions but what we are focusing on is delivering and letting all political parties know what the progress is,” he said.

“We understand that whoever nudges across the line will face the bleakest outlook of public expenditure in a generation,” Coe a former Olympic middle distance champion, said.

“There can be no time to waste (with the new government). We do not adapt or tailor anything. They (political parties) are all focused on the need for an immovable deadline.”

Coe said organisers would also “very soon” finalise their venue plan with the relocation of rhythmic gymnastics and badminton.

He also said organisers would unveil the mascot of the Games well before July 27, two years to the day of the Games opening, with sales to start on that day.

The IOC caught a first glimpse of the tightly-guarded secret on Thursday. Coe refused, however, to reveal any details other than the IOC liking what they saw.

“Yes they did see it,” Coe said, adding they had also presented “the narrative behind it” and that the mascot had already gone into production.

(Editing by John O’Brien; To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

China stripped of Sydney gymnastics bronze

Dubai, Apr.29 (ANI): China has been stripped of their women”s gymnastics team bronze medal from the Sydney 2000 Olympics after one of the athletes falsified her age, the International Olympic Committee said on Wednesday.

According to a China Daily report, an International Gymnastics Federation (FIG) probe had found in February that Dong Fangxiao was younger than the minimum age requirement of 16 after registering different ages at Sydney and the Beijing Games eight years later.

“The medal and diplomas of Dong Fangxiao are withdrawn and reallocated accordingly,” IOC spokesman Mark Adams told reporters after an IOC Executive Board meeting.

The United States, fourth-place finishers in Sydney, are now upgraded to third place and will be awarded the bronze medal.

The IOC ordered the Chinese Olympic Committee to return the medal and her diplomas so they can be re-awarded and told the committee it must ensure rules regarding age-limits are strictly kept. (ANI)

Forlan strike gives Atletico edge over Liverpool

Diego Forlan scrambled an early goal to give Atletico Madrid a deserved 1-0 win over a lethargic-looking Liverpool in the first leg of their Europa League semi-final on Thursday.

The Uruguay striker fluffed an attempted header but his follow-up effort evaded goalkeeper Pepe Reina and defender Jamie Carragher in the ninth minute at a boisterous Calderon stadium.

Reina pulled off a fine reflex save to deny Simao Sabrosa early in the second period and flung himself to his right to block a powerful Tomas Ujfalusi strike as dominant Atletico pressed for a second goal.

“We are happy but we know that we have to play another 90 minutes and it’s going to be difficult,” Forlan said in a television interview.

“It’s going to be hard. They play well at Anfield and they are a very strong side,” added Forlan, who scored two goals for his former club Manchester United to win a Premier League match at Liverpool’s home ground in 2002.

After a minute’s silence for former International Olympic Committee (IOC) president Juan Antonio Samaranch, who died on Wednesday, Atletico seized early control.

Liverpool, five-times European champions, appeared sluggish, perhaps as a result of their 24-hour 2000-kilometre journey to the Spanish capital by train and plane due to airspace restrictions caused by the volcanic eruption in Iceland.

ACROBATIC SAVE

The English side’s only real chance of the first half came in the 19th minute when captain Steven Gerrard raced clear but his left-foot strike under pressure flew well wide.

Atletico, who have struggled in La Liga but are also through to the King’s Cup final, twice went close to extending their lead in the second period.

Ujfalusi sent a looping cross over from the right and Spaniard Reina flung out a hand to palm Portugal winger Simao’s crisp half volley away before the keeper denied the Czech defender with another acrobatic save.

The return leg is at Anfield next Thursday. The winners play Hamburg SV or Fulham in the final on May 12.

Former IOC president Samaranch dies at 89

Barcelona, April 22 (IANS) Former International Olympic Committee (IOC) president Juan Antonio Samaranch has died in a hospital here Wednesday. He was 89.

Samaranch, who had suffered heart and breathing problems in recent months, was taken to the Quiron hospital after feeling unwell Sunday evening. Although he was able to walk into the hospital, his condition worsened considerably Tuesday, Xinhua reported.

Samaranch died of coronary and respiratory failure Wednesday, just a few minutes after the hospital issued a statement saying he had gone into ‘irreversible shock’, and was in a critical condition.

His body will be taken to the Palau de la Generalitat in Barcelona so that well wishers can pay their last respects Thursday.

Many believe Samaranch, who was IOC chief between 1980 and 2001, was responsible for the Olympic Games as we know them today.

His last public appearance was on March 4 this year when was awarded Hispano-Chinese Foundation prize for his time as president of the Hispano-Chinese Forum, which he led since November 2001.

IOC President Jacques Rogge hailed Samaranch’s contribution to the Olympic movement, describing him as ‘a great man, a mentor and a friend who dedicated his long and fulfilled life to Olympism’.

‘I cannot find the words to express the distress of the Olympic family,’ said Rogge. ‘I am personally deeply saddened by the death of the man who built up the Olympic Games of the modern era, a man who inspired me, and whose knowledge of sport was truly exceptional.’

‘Thanks to his extraordinary vision and talent, Samaranch was the architect of a strong and unified Olympic Movement. I can only pay tribute to his tremendous achievements and legacy, and praise his genuine devotion to the Olympic Movement and its values. We have lost a great man, a mentor and a friend who dedicated his long and fulfilled life to Olympism,’Rogge added.

Born in Barcelona in 1920, Samaranch pursued a career as diplomat and sports administrator before leading the IOC for 21 years from 1980 to 2001.

Soon after his election, Samaranch worked towards the abolition of amateurism at the Olympic Games. Despite two boycotts in Moscow in 1980 and in Los Angeles in 1984, Samaranch managed to maintain the quality of the Games and increased the number of participating countries.

The IOC said in the statement Samaranch was responsible for the new IOC headquarters building in Vidy and for inaugurating The Olympic Museum in Lausanne. He also championed the representation of women in the IOC, overseeing the entry of the first women members in the 1980s.

He was also responsible for setting up the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS), and for involving the athletes themselves in the decision-making of the IOC by creating the IOC Athletes’ Commission.

Forlan strike gives Atletico edge over Liverpool

Diego Forlan scrambled an early goal to give Atletico Madrid a deserved 1-0 win over a lethargic-looking Liverpool in the first leg of their Europa League semi-final on Thursday.

The Uruguay striker fluffed an attempted header in the ninth minute at a boisterous Calderon stadium but his follow-up effort evaded goalkeeper Pepe Reina and defender Jamie Carragher and squeezed just inside the post.

Liverpool’s journey to the Spanish capital via Paris had taken 24 hours due to airspace restrictions and the Premier League side, missing former Atletico striker Fernando Torres, struggled to build any momentum after falling behind.

Liverpool coach Rafael Benitez fielded a cautious-looking starting team, with defensive midfielders Lucas and Javier Mascherano both included and David N’Gog alone up front.

Reina twice saved them from falling further behind in the second half. The Spaniard pulled off a fine reflex stop to deny Simao Sabrosa and later flung himself to his right to block a powerful Tomas Ujfalusi strike as dominant Atletico pressed for a second goal.

“We are happy but we know that we have to play another 90 minutes and it’s going to be difficult,” Forlan said in a television interview.

“It’s going to be hard. They play well at Anfield and they are a very strong side,” added Forlan, who scored two goals for his former club Manchester United to win a Premier League match at Liverpool’s home ground in 2002.

MINUTE’S SILENCE

After a minute’s silence for former International Olympic Committee (IOC) president Juan Antonio Samaranch, who died on Wednesday, Atletico seized control.

Liverpool’s only real chance of the first half came in the 19th minute when captain Steven Gerrard raced clear but his left-foot strike under pressure flew well wide.

Atletico, who have struggled in La Liga but are also through to the King’s Cup final, passed the ball confidently and the often erratic Luis Perea was a rock in central defence.

“It’s a slender advantage but one that may be decisive,” said Atletico coach Quique Sanchez Flores, like Spanish compatriot Benitez a former manager of La Liga club Valencia.

“We cannot be too confident, we mustn’t lose sight of the fact that we will have to play well again at Anfield,” he told a news conference.

The return leg is next Thursday and the winners play Hamburg SV or Fulham, who drew 0-0 in Hamburg on Thursday, in the final in the German port city on May 12.

(Additional reporting by Martin Roberts)

(Editing by Ed Osmond, To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

Samaranch given state-like funeral in Barcelona

Juan Antonio Samaranch was given a send-off resembling a state funeral in his native Barcelona on Thursday, a day after the former International Olympic Committee (IOC) president died at the age of 89.

King Juan Carlos and his family, current IOC president Jacques Rogge and high-profile figures from Spanish sport and politics were among the mourners.

Rafael Nadal, the world’s number three tennis player, helped carry the coffin to the city cathedral.

The casket, draped in the Olympic flag, had earlier been placed in the chapel at the Catalan regional government’s palace and hundreds of people filed past to pay their respects to the man who brought the Olympic Games to the port city in 1992.

“I came here above all to support the (Samaranch) family and show appreciation for everything he did for our sport,” Mallorca-born Nadal said.

“He was able to revolutionise sport, until he became one of the most important people in the international Olympic movement,” the 23-year-old added. “He will always stay in our thoughts.”

Samaranch was admitted to the Quiron clinic in Barcelona on Sunday with acute heart problems and passed away on Wednesday after suffering “cardio-respiratory failure”.

After steering the Olympic movement through two turbulent decades, marked by political boycotts, bribery and drug scandals and a greater emphasis on commercialism, he was appointed honorary life president of the IOC when he stepped down as president in 2001.

“I can say today that Samaranch was the most influential IOC leader since (founder) Pierre de Coubertain,” Rogge said in a televised speech at the Catalan government palace.

“Samaranch changed everything and made the Olympic Games what they are today.”

Samaranch will be buried at the cemetery on the Montjuic hill near the stadium that was used for the 1992 Games.

(Additional reporting by Emma Pinedo in Madrid; Writing by Iain Rogers in Madrid, editing by Ed Osmond; To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)