Jordan Chiles: American gymnast denied floor exercise bronze medal

Jordan Chiles: American gymnast denied floor exercise bronze medal



CNN

The International Olympic Committee announced on Sunday that the bronze medal won by American gymnast Jordan Chiles in the floor exercise at the Paris Games will be awarded to her Romanian counterpart Ana Barbosu.

It comes after a ruling by the Court of Arbitration for Sport on Saturday that said the United States’ preliminary investigation into Chiles’ score in Monday’s floor exercise final was brought forward after the one-minute deadline.

The International Gymnastics Federation said Chile’s original score of 13.666 would be reinstated, and Barboso’s ranking – with a score of 13.700 – would be improved to third place.

The IOC confirmed that changing the result would mean stripping Chiles of the bronze medal and giving it to Barboso.

“Following the decision of the Court of Arbitration for Sport regarding the women’s artistic gymnastics floor exercise final and the adjustment of the standings by the International Gymnastics Federation, the IOC will re-allocate the bronze medal to Ana Barbosu (Romania),” the IOC said in a statement.

“We are in contact with the Romanian Olympic Committee to discuss the medal redistribution ceremony and with the US Olympic Committee regarding the return of the bronze medal.”

CNN has reached out to the USOPC and USA Gymnastics to see if they will appeal to the Court of Arbitration for Sport. USA Gymnastics referred to its statement Saturday saying it was “devastated” by the ruling.

The competition ended on Monday in dramatic fashion. As soon as the competition ended on Monday with Chiles’ performance, Barboso thought she had won the bronze medal after scoring 13.700 points.

See also  Carlos Correa rejoins the exciting Twins team as they open the series against the White Sox: Source

Chiles initially received 13.666 points, but her coaches successfully challenged the difficulty level, which added 0.1 points to her score, pushing her into third place, behind gold medalist Rebecca Andrade and American Simone Biles.

Their appearance together on the gymnastics podium at the first all-black Olympics produced one of the most iconic images of the Games as Americans bowed to Andrade.

But the Court of Arbitration for Sport’s ruling that the investigation filed on behalf of Chile “was raised after the one-minute time limit” stipulated in the regulations has raised doubts about Chile’s medal.

Chiles posted four broken heart emojis on her Instagram account after the CAS ruling and said: “I will take this time and remove myself from social media for the sake of my mental health, thank you.”

CNN’s Essie Ronald, Jacob Leff, Homero de la Fuente and Dan Moriarty contributed to this report.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *