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奥委会主席亲口承认违章操作---再次拳打老安老古老K |
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作者:Anonymous 在 罕见奇谈 发贴, 来自 http://www.hjclub.org
奥委会主席亲口承认违章操作-再次拳打老安老古老K
奥委会(IOC)和国际冰联(ISU)无法无天,在没有完成对法国裁判“作弊”
听证的情况下,仓促更改比赛结果。昨天我已经提供纽约时报的报道,三位
西方裁判指出,ISU 无法提供改判的规则根据(因为没根据),并且指出,
即使取消法国裁判的裁决,俄国选手仍然应以短节目的比分破除平局而胜出。
因此,“银化金”既不符合“程序公正”,也未见得符合“结果公平”。
樊某指出这一点,老安老古老K老周老黄都不满意,打了几天架,坚持说老樊
没证据证明IOC违反程序。现在咱直接引用IOC新主席的原话,看各位这番还有
何好说。
据MSNBC报道,当IOC头子Rogge被问到程序问题时,说道:
“我们不需要臭规矩,我们需要公正,现在就要”
(We don抰 need no stinking rules. We need justice. Now。)
这可是违章操作的坦白交代。再明白不过了。
和合说得对。IOC的官员是政客。由政客取代裁判发金牌,这么说也是没道理的。
各位争来争去,无非是因为希望加拿大赢。是不是?老樊对俄国毛子从来就没
什么感情。但公道话该说还得说。
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Rogge makes his mark fast
First-year IOC president makes Cinquanta, ISU do the right thing
(MSNBC)
SALT LAKE CITY, Feb. 15 - Never in the history of the modern Olympics had
there been a moment like this. Never have we seen the International
Skating Union stand in front of the world and admit the truth of what has
so often been suspected - that a competition was, to be blunt, fixed. And
only three times before has the IOC itself demanded that someone unfairly
deprived of a medal be given that medal.
OTTAVIO CINQUANTA, THE ISU president who waffles so well he might have
learned the art at the knee of Bill Clinton himself, didn抰 make this
admission voluntarily. Dr. Jacque Rogge, the rookie president of the IOC,
all but dragged Cinquanta by the ear into the presence of the world to say
the words people who care about the Olympics have been waiting to hear all
week, to admit that a judge was influenced to award the pairs figure skating
medal to the Russian pair, Elena Berezhnaya and Anton Sikharulidze.
That alone was enough to stop the figurative presses. But the ISU then took
another historic act and did something that, just two days earlier, Cinquanta
had said was not provided for by the rules and constitution that governs
everything the ISU. He awarded a second gold medal to Canadian skaters Jamie
Sale and David Pelletier. It will be awarded after the final skating event of
the games, Feb. 21 and the over/under on the standing ovation that will follow
is probably five minutes in Salt Lake City and the rest of the century in Canada.
Everyone should listen to and believe the words of Pelletier, who said, "This
doesn抰 take anything away from Elena and Anton. This was not something against
them. It was something against the system. And we hope the inquiries will not
end here, but that they will go forward."
Added Sale, "We are delighted, but we feel a little bit shy about it because the
other athletes are doing their best and winning gold medals, and everyone is
still talking about this. And this isn抰 what the Olympics should be about."
Finally, Michael Chambers the president of the Canadian Olympic Association said,
"It抯 a great day for sport and a great day for fairness and integrity in sport."
They handled it with great dignity and grace, but that抯 what they抳e been doing
all week. If all other countries and association acted as well, the Games would
have never been subject to this sort of embarrassment and scandal.
But they don抰 and Rogge flogged, the ISU along at a speed that is rarely seen
in the closed world of international sports federations. Two days before,
Cinquanta had said the ISU could not meet to address the issue until the next
Monday. The ISU would not be stampeded into action, he said. It would follow
the rule book behind which it has hid for decades. It would not discuss the issue
in public.
Although Rogge let the ISU pretend that it intended to act this quickly all along,
it is clear that the new president from Belgium listened to Cinquanta ramble on
about rules and procedures and schedules, and said, "We don抰 need no stinking
rules. We need justice. Now."
Or, to put it in more genteel terms, "You say it抯 not in your rule book? Guess
what, it is now."
It was an historic moment for the Olympics, one in which the IOC came out from
behind it抯 closed doors, stood up in front of the world, admitted a wrong had been
done, and then acted swiftly and decisively to correct it. Rogge said he could do no
less, 搃n fairness to the athletes."
"I don抰 think this has created damage to the Olympic movement, because it was
resolved fast," said Rogge. "This is definitely now a closed matter, and I believe
the full attention will come to the athletes from now on."
That was more a wish than a reality. Skategate or Ice Storm or Hans Canada and
the Silver Medal or whatever you wish to call it will command not sports pages
but front pages now. With the ISU still to meet Monday to determine if anyone
in the French skating federation should be disciplined along with the disgraced
judge, Marie Reine le Gougne, and with the bleak history of what Don King - whose
talents would dovetail quite nicely with figure skating - would call deceit and
trickery, we抣l be talking about this for a long time to come. And once rid of le
Gougne, who has been banished and has left town comforted only by her expensive
furs, Cinquanta showed no eagerness to act quickly or dispense the truth in bits
that can be measured in anything larger than microns.
But Rogge at least has forced quick justice for Sale and Pelletier. With that
issue put to bed, the rest of the games and the other athletes who continue to
do remarkable things can regain some of the attention they deserve.
What Rogge did will be seen not just years, but generations from now, as a
watershed moment in the history of the Modern Games and perhaps the defining
moment of his young presidency.
He came here in the vast shadow cast by Juan Antonio Samaranch, whose
Zeus-like rule had utterly reshaped the Olympics over the past two decades.
Rogge did not have the political alliances Samaranch had, and, we see, does
not share Samaranch抯 preference for handling things in secret while publicly
insisting that, no matter what horrible thing has happened, it was just another
day in paradise. If a sporting scandal hit, no one knew how he would handle it
or how others in the Olympic Family would react to his dictates.
In the two days since the ISU and the IOC held press conferences to address what
was then a nascent scandal, Rogge has acted decisively and forcefully. To turn
Cinquanta from a stonewall to a Jell-O mold was an extraordinary act, as was his
forcing justice on a body that so often seems not to have the word in its precious
rule book.
There can be no question who抯 in charge of the Olympics now, nor can anyone dare
to believe that Rogge will not act as quickly and decisively to correct future
errors. Already, the Games are better because of him.
Asked if the IOC抯 image was damaged by this, he said, "I don抰 see how the IOC
could have been embarrassed. We did it because of justice and fairness for the
athletes."
Others might disagree, but he was right. The embarrassment and shame is with the
ISU, and it will remain there until it overhauls its rules, changes the way it
judges competitions, and deals with the rest of the malefactors in this drama.
作者:Anonymous 在 罕见奇谈 发贴, 来自 http://www.hjclub.org |
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