Motorsports

Friday, 21 February 2014

Sochi: Skating Scandal Shocks World


*Kim weeps

Fallout continues after Russian Adelina Sotnikova wins figure skating gold over Korean Yuna Kim  

A Russian figure skater has beaten a Korean skater to the gold medal in the women’s free skate despite clearly being the second best competitor on the ice.And Korea, which hosts the 2018 Winter Olympics, is absolutely furious.

Word among figure skating experts is that you’re skating on very thin ice indeed to believe that Russia’s Adelina Sotnikova’s upset victory over reigning Olympic champion Yuna Kim of South Korea was richly deserved.
There is even the suggestion the fix could be in, with many seasoned skating commentators and former competitors absolutely astounded at the result.
Katarina Witt, the former Easter German glamour queen of the ice, tweeted “Shame Gold Medal, Yuna Kim is a real queen”.
Alex Goldberger, Olympics researcher at US broadcaster NBC said “Adelina Sotnikova was excellent tonight, but Yuna Kim was robbed”.
Adding to the intrigue is the fact that Russian judge Alla Shekhovtseva, is married to the general director of the Figure Skating Federation of Russia.
There were three other Eastern European judges on the panel but no Korean. And if fans in Sochi have taught the world anything at these Games, it’s that Eastern European nations cheer for each other if one of their own is not winning.
Yuna Kim won gold in Vancouver and is a revered figure in Korea. Largely due to her popularity, outrage over the perceived judging swindle has gone viral in cyberspace. Online activist site change.org has had the most clicked ever petition in its history – by a factor of five.
“Our website is going crazy,” said Tony Robertson of change.org in Australia.
“More than 900,000 people have signed a petition in just over six hours demanding an investigation into the winner of the women’s figure skating competition.
“This is the most traffic we’ve ever seen on Change.org, coming in at five times our previous record.
“The majority of signatures (about 90 per cent) are coming from people inside South Korea, with the other 10 per cent or so coming from inside the US.
“Right now, we’re seeing nearly 100,000 new signatures every 15 minutes.”



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