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Filtering by Category: news

ISU World Junior Figure Skating Championships 2022 allotted to Tallinn (EST)

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On February 12, 2022 the ISU Council decided that the ISU World Junior Figure Skating Championships could not be held as planned on March 7-13, 2022 in Sofia, Bulgaria.

Mindful that the 2021 edition of this World Junior Championships also had to be canceled, with the potential result of Junior Skaters not being able to compete at the World Championships level for two consecutive seasons, and with the perspective of an easing pandemic situation during the Spring, the ISU Council evaluated the feasibility of postponing the Event. The Bulgarian Skating Federation was not in a position to host the Championships at a later date consequently other ISU Members were invited to apply.

One application was received from the Estonian Skating Union and the ISU Council decided to allot the ISU World Junior Figure Skating Championships 2022 to Tallinn, Estonia which will take place on April 13 – 17, 2022.

The ISU regrets that the staging of the Championships is not possible as originally planned and thanks the Bulgarian Skating Federation for their efforts and the Estonian Skating Union for their ongoing support and for their application

The safety and security of all participants at ISU Events remain a top priority and the ISU Council will continue to closely monitor the situation in Ukraine and any Covid-19 developments and their impact on the ISU activity and will take additional steps if and when required.

Source

Skaters representing Russia and Belarus no longer allowed at international ISU competitions

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ISU Statement on the Ukrainian crisis - Participation in international competitions of Skaters and Officials from Russia and Belarus

The ISU Council reiterates its solidarity with all those affected by the conflict in Ukraine and our thoughts are with the entire Ukrainian people and country. The ISU Council reaffirms its full solidarity with the ISU Members in Ukraine, the Ukrainian Speed Skating Federation and the Ukrainian Figure Skating Federation. The ISU Council will evaluate possibilities for swift humanitarian assistance to its Ukrainian ISU Members. 

The ISU Council carefully evaluated the IOC Statement of February 28, 2022 as well as appeals received from ISU Members and others calling for a ban on the participation of Skaters and Officials from Russia and Belarus in ISU Events and other International Skating competitions. 

Following the IOC recommendation, in order to protect the integrity of ice skating competitions and for the safety of all the participants of international ice skating competitions, the ISU Council based on Article 17.1.q)i) of the ISU Constitution, agreed that with immediate effect and until further notice, no Skaters belonging to the ISU Members in Russia (Russian Skating Union and the Figure Skating Federation of Russia) and Belarus (Skating Union of Belarus) shall be invited or allowed to participate in International ice skating Competitions including ISU Championships and other ISU Events. The same applies to Officials listed in the respective ISU Communications and/or Regulations under Russia and Belarus.

The ISU Council will continue to closely monitor the situation in Ukraine and its impact on the ISU activity and will take additional steps if and when required.

Source

IOC EB decides no medal ceremonies following CAS decision on the case of ROC skater

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The Executive Board (EB) of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) takes note of the decision by the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) to allow figure skater Kamila Valieva (Russian Olympic Committee) to continue to compete at the Olympic Winter Games Beijing 2022.

The IOC has to follow the rule of law and will therefore have to allow her to compete in the Women’s Single Skating competition on Tuesday, 15 February 2022 and, if qualified, on 17 February 2022.

The CAS has clearly expressed that the decision taken by the Ad-hoc Division today is not a decision on whether Ms Valieva violated the anti-doping rules. It was limited to the sole question of whether Ms Valieva could be provisionally suspended from the Olympic competition following a positive A-sample taken on 25 December 2021.

The management of the case after this positive A-sample has not yet been concluded. Only after due process has been followed can it be established whether Ms Valieva infringed the World Anti-Doping Code (WADC) and would have to be sanctioned.

This inconclusive situation led the IOC EB to the following decisions, after having had initial consultations with the National Olympic Committees (NOCs) concerned:

  1. In the interest of fairness to all athletes and the NOCs concerned, it would not be appropriate to hold the medal ceremony for the figure skating team event during the Olympic Winter Games Beijing 2022 as it would include an athlete who on the one hand has a positive A-sample, but whose violation of the anti-doping rules has not yet been established on the other hand.

  2. Should Ms Valieva finish amongst the top three competitors in the Women’s Single Skating competition, no flower ceremony and no medal ceremony will take place during the Olympic Winter Games Beijing 2022.

  3. The IOC requests the International Skating Union (ISU), for reasons of fairness, to allow a 25th competitor to participate in the Free Skating part of the competition on 17 February, in case Ms Valieva is ranked in the first 24 of the short programme on 15 February.

  4. The IOC will, in consultation with the athletes and NOCs concerned, organise dignified medal ceremonies once the case of Ms Valieva has been concluded.

Source

WADA statement following CAS decision not to reinstate skater’s provisional suspension

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The World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) acknowledges the ruling announced today by the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) to confirm the lifting of the provisional suspension of Russian Olympic Committee figure skater Kamila Valieva.

WADA’s appeal to CAS in this case, which was filed alongside appeals by the International Olympic Committee and the International Skating Union, was based on WADA’s position that the decision by the Russian Anti-Doping Agency (RUSADA) Disciplinary Committee to lift the mandatory provisional suspension on the athlete was not in line with the terms of the World Anti-Doping Code (Code). WADA is therefore disappointed by today’s ruling of the CAS Ad Hoc Division. While WADA has not received the reasoned award, it appears that the CAS panel decided not to apply the terms of the Code, which does not allow for specific exceptions to be made in relation to mandatory provisional suspensions for 'protected persons', including minors.

Concerning the analysis of the athlete's sample, WADA always expects Anti-Doping Organizations to liaise with the laboratories in order to ensure they expedite the analysis of samples so that the results are received prior to athletes traveling to or competing in a major event, such as the Olympic or Paralympic Games and, where applicable, conduct results management of the cases related to such athletes.

According to information received by WADA, the sample in this case was not flagged by RUSADA as being a priority sample when it was received by the anti-doping laboratory in Stockholm, Sweden. This meant the laboratory did not know to fast-track the analysis of this sample.

As previously announced, under the terms of the Code, when a minor is involved in an anti-doping case, there is a requirement to investigate that athlete’s support personnel. RUSADA has already indicated it has begun that process. In addition, WADA’s independent Intelligence and Investigations Department will look into it.

Source

CAS declines to impose a provisional suspension for Kamila Valieva

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Valieva will be allowed to participate in the Women’s Individual Event at the Olympics. The investigation into the positive doping test will continue.

The Court of Arbitration for Sport’s reasons for the decision include:

On the basis of the very limited facts of this case, and after consideration of the relevant legal issues, it has determined that no provisional suspension should be imposed on the Athlete due to the following exceptional circumstances:

a) The Athlete is a “Protected Person” under the World Anti-Doping Code (WADC);

b) The RUSADA Anti-Doping Rules and the WADC are silent with respect to provisional suspension imposed on protected persons, while these rules have specific provisions for different standards of evidence and for lower sanctions in the case of protected persons;

c) The Panel considered fundamental principles of fairness, proportionality, irreparable harm, and the relative balance of interests as between the Applicants and the Athlete, who did not test positive during the Olympic Games in Beijing and is still subject to a disciplinary procedure on the merits following the positive anti-doping test undertaken in December 2021; in particular, the Panel considered that preventing the Athlete from competing at the Olympic Games would cause her irreparable harm in these circumstances;

d) The CAS Panel also emphasized that there were serious issues of untimely notification of the results of the Athlete’s anti-doping test that was performed in December 2021 which impinged upon the Athlete’s ability to establish certain legal requirements for her benefit, while such late notification was not her fault, in the middle of the Olympic Winter Games Beijing 2022.

Source

2022 ISU World Junior Figure Skating Championships Postponed

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The ISU is continually monitoring the sanitary and entry conditions in countries hosting ISU Events, as well as travel restrictions around the World. In regard to the ISU World Junior Figure Skating Championships 2022 scheduled to be held on March 7-13, 2022, the ISU has been alerted to a potentially high number of Covid-19 infections among participants, and also local organizers, due to the Omricon wave which is expected to peak in Bulgaria during the scheduled period of the Championships. The ISU furthermore noted that the currently valid entry restrictions to Bulgaria could seriously complicate the entry into the country of participants from certain countries and age groups. Finally, the ISU acknowledged the currently valid, rigorous quarantine requirements in the case of positive or close contact cases, which is a particularly sensitive matter for a Junior Event that includes minors.

Unfortunately, considering the above-mentioned complicated epidemic situation, the ISU Council decided that the Event cannot be held as planned on March 7-13, 2022 in Sofia, Bulgaria.

Mindful that the 2021 edition of this Junior World Championships also had to be cancelled, with the potential result of Junior Skaters not being able to compete at the World Championships level for two consecutive seasons, and with the perspective of an easing pandemic situation during the Spring, the ISU Council is currently evaluating the feasibility of postponing the Event until May 2022. Consultation is ongoing with the Bulgarian Skating Federation and the participating ISU Members as to their intentions for participation in case of a postponement until May. A decision is expected by the next online ISU Council meeting, scheduled for February 24, 2022.

The ISU regrets that the staging of the Event is not possible as planned and thanks the Bulgarian Skating Federation for their efforts and cooperation and the participating ISU Members for their understanding.

Source

Beijing 2022: The ITA informs on figure skater Kamila Valieva

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The International Testing Agency (ITA), leading the anti-doping program for the Olympic Winter Games Beijing 2022, informs about the case of figure skater Kamila Valieva.​

First, the ITA stresses that Ms. Kamila Valieva, a member of the Russian Olympic Committee (ROC) delegation in Beijing, is a minor and therefore a ‘Protected Person’ under the World Anti-Doping Code – this status applies to persons under the age of 16. As such, the parties are not subject to mandatory public disclosure of her name or any case she might be involved in, instead any public disclosure must be proportionate to the facts and circumstances of the case. Seeing that some in the media did not grant her the same protection and have reported widely on the basis of unofficial information following the postponement of the medal ceremony of the figure skating Team Event at the Olympic Winter Games Beijing 2022, the ITA acknowledges the necessity for official information due to heightened public interest.

To state the facts chronologically, a sample from the athlete was collected under the testing authority and results management authority of the Russian Anti-Doping Agency (RUSADA) on 25 December 2021 during the 2022 Russian Figure Skating Championships in Saint Petersburg, Russia. The WADA-accredited laboratory of Stockholm, Sweden, reported that the sample had returned an Adverse Analytical Finding (AAF) for the non-specified prohibited substance trimetazidine (classified as S4. Hormone and Metabolic Modulators according to the Prohibited List of the World Anti-Doping Code) on 8 February 2022. Following this, the athlete was provisionally suspended by RUSADA with immediate effect.

Pursuant to Article 15 of the IOC Anti-Doping Rules applicable to the Olympic Winter Games Beijing 2022, the decision of RUSADA imposing a provisional suspension automatically prohibited the athlete from participation in all sports during the provisional suspension, including the Olympic Winter Games Beijing 2022.

As the sample was collected by RUSADA ahead of the Winter Games, this case is not under the jurisdiction of the IOC and thus not directly managed by the ITA. In line with the IOC Anti-Doping Rules, the ITA immediately informed the athlete that the provisional suspension imposed on her by RUSADA is binding upon the IOC and the athlete is prevented from competing, training, coaching, or participating in any activity, during the Olympic Winter Games.

Due to the fact that this is not a case under the authority of the IOC and taking into account her abovementioned status as Protected Person, the ITA abstained from publicly disclosing the case following the notification in order to protect the athlete’s identity as a minor and to ensure that all necessary measures for her physical and mental safeguarding could be implemented. All the while all due legal processes were initiated.

The athlete challenged the imposition of the provisional suspension before the RUSADA Disciplinary Anti-Doping Committee on 9 February 2022 and a hearing took place on the same day. On the evening of 9 February 2020, the RUSADA Disciplinary Anti-Doping Committee decided to lift the athlete’s provisional suspension, thus allowing her to continue her participation in the Olympic Winter Games Beijing 2022. The reasoned decision, including the grounds for which the provisional suspension was lifted, will be issued shortly to all concerned parties.

Under the World Anti-Doping Code, the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA), the International Skating Union (ISU), RUSADA and the IOC have a right to appeal the decision to lift the provisional suspension before the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS). The IOC will exercise its right to appeal and not to wait for the reasoned decision by RUSADA, because a decision is needed before the next competition the athlete is due to take part in (Women Single Skating, 15 February 2022).

Following the delegation of the IOC’s anti-doping program in relation to the Olympic Games to the ITA, the ITA will lead the appeal before CAS on behalf of the IOC.

The proceedings on the merits of the apparent anti-doping rule violation, including the athlete’s right to request the analysis of the B-sample, will be pursued by RUSADA in due course.

The decision on the results of the ROC team in the Team Figure Skating event can be taken by the ISU only after a final decision on the full merits of the case has been taken. The procedure, which is initiated currently, can only address the provisional suspension.

Given that the legal process for this case is not finally concluded, the ITA will not provide any additional comments. Any further information on the case will be issued in form of a public statement.

Source

Team Russia: 2022 Olympic Entries

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WOMEN

  • Kamila Valieva

  • Anna Shcherbakova

  • Alexandra Trusova

  • Alt: Elizaveta Tuktamysheva, Maiia Khromykh

MEN

  • Mark Kondratiuk

  • Andrei Mozalev

  • Mikhail Kolyada

  • Alt: Evgeni Semenenko, Petr Gumennik

ICE DANCE

  • Victoria Sinitsina/Nikita Katsalapov

  • Alexandra Stepanova/Ivan Bukin

  • Diana Davis/Gleb Smolkin

  • Alt: Elizaveta Khudaiberdieva/Egor Bazin, Annabelle Morozov/Andrei Bagin, Elizaveta Shanaeva/Devid Naryzhnyy

PAIRS

  • Anastasia Mishina/Aleksandr Galliamov

  • Aleksandra Boikova/Dmitrii Kozlovskii

  • Evgenia Tarasova/Vladimir Morozov

  • Alt: Daria Pavliuchenko/Denis Khodykin, Iuliia Artemeva/Mikhail Nazarychev

Source

Team USA: 2022 Olympic and ISU Championships Entries

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OLYMPICS

  • Men: Nathan Chen, Vincent Zhou, Jason Brown (Alt: Ilia Malinin, Camden Pulkinen, Jimmy Ma)

  • Women: Mariah Bell, Karen Chen, Alysa Liu (Alt: Lindsay Thorngren, Amber Glenn, Gabriella Izzo)

  • Pairs: Ashley Cain-Gribble/Timothy Leduc, Alexa Knierim/Brandon Frazier (Alt: Jessica Calalang/Brian Johnson, Audrey Lu/Misha Mitrofanov, Emily Chan/Spencer Howe)

  • Ice Dance: Madison Chock/Evan Bates, Madison Hubbell/Zachary Donohue, Kaitlin Hawayek/Jean Luc Baker (Alt: Caroline Green/Michael Parsons, Emily Bratti/Ian Somerville, Katarina Wolfkostin/Jeffrey Chen)

WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS

  • Men: Nathan Chen, Ilia Malinin*, Vincent Zhou (Alt: Jason Brown, Camden Pulkinen, Jimmy Ma)

  • Women: Mariah Bell, Karen Chen, Alysa Liu (Alt: Amber Glenn, Lindsay Thorngren, Gabriella Izzo)

  • Pairs: Ashley Cain-Gribble/Timothy Leduc, Alexa Knierim/Brandon Frazier (Alt: Jessica Calalang/Brian Johnson, Audrey Lu/Misha Mitrofanov, Emily Chan/Spencer Howe)

  • Ice Dance: Madison Chock/Evan Bates, Madison Hubbell/Zachary Donohue, Kaitlin Hawayek/Jean Luc Baker (Alt: Caroline Green/Michael Parsons, Emily Bratti/Ian Somerville, Christina Carreira/Anthony Ponomarenko)

FOUR CONTINENTS

  • Men: Camden Pulkinen, Jimmy Ma, Tomoki Hiwatashi (Alt: Ryan Dunk)

  • Women: Gabriella Izzo, Audrey Shin, Starr Andrews (Alt: Hanna Harrell, Sierra Venetta)

  • Pairs: Audrey Lu/Misha Mitrofanov, Emily Chan/Spencer Howe, Katie McBeath/Nathan Bartholomay

  • Ice Dance: Caroline Green/Michael Parsons, Emily Bratti/Ian Somerville, Christina Carreira/Anthony Ponomarenko (Alt: Eva Pate/Logan Bye, Lorraine McNamara/Anton Spiridonov, Molly Cesanek/Yehor Yehorov)

JUNIOR WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS

  • Men: TBA

  • Women: TBA

  • Pairs: Isabelle Martins/Ryan Bedard, Anastasiia Smirnova/Danil Siianytsia (Alt: Catherine Rivers/Timothy Chapman, Cate Fleming/Chase Finster)

  • Ice Dance: Oona Brown/Gage Brown, Angela Ling/Caleb Wein, Katarina Wolfkostin/Jeffrey Chen (Alt: Leah Neset/Artem Markelov, Helena Carhart/Volodymyr Horovyi)

*Skater still requires TES minimums

Sources: 12345678

Team Canada: 2022 Olympic and ISU Championships Entries

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OLYMPICS

  • Men: Keegan Messing, Roman Sadovsky

  • Women: Madeline Schizas

  • Pairs: Kirsten Moore-Towers/Michael Marinaro, Vanessa James/Eric Radford

  • Ice Dance: Piper Gilles/Paul Poirier, Laurence Fournier Beaudry/Nikolaj Soerensen, Marjorie Lajoie/Zachary Lagha

WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS

  • Men: Keegan Messing, Roman Sadovsky

  • Women: Madeline Schizas

  • Pairs: Kirsten Moore-Towers/Michael Marinaro, Vanessa James/Eric Radford

  • Ice Dance: Piper Gilles/Paul Poirier, Laurence Fournier Beaudry/Nikolaj Soerensen, Marjorie Lajoie/Zachary Lagha

FOUR CONTINENTS

  • Men: Wesley Chiu, Corey Circelli, Joseph Phan

  • Women: Gabrielle Daleman, Veronik Mallet, Alison Schumacher

  • Pairs: Lori Ann Matte/Thierry Ferland, Deanna Stellato/Maxime Deschamps, Evelyn Walsh/Trennt Michaud

  • Ice Dance: Marie-Jade Lauriault/Romain Le Gac, Haley Sales/Nikolas Wamsteeker, Carolane Soucisse/Shane Firus

JUNIOR WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS

  • Men: Wesley Chiu, Stephen Gogolev

  • Women: Justine Miclette, Lia Pereira

  • Pairs: Summer Homick/Marty Haubrich*, Brooke McIntosh/Benjamin Mimar*

  • Ice Dance: Nadiia Bashynska/Peter Beaumont, Natalie D’Alessandro/Bruce Waddell

*Skater still requires TES minimums

Sources: 123