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  • Olympic digest: Protest costs wrestler bronze

    Rocky Mountain News, CO

    Olympic digest: Protest costs wrestler bronze

    Associated Press
    Originally published 12:43 p.m., August 16, 2008
    Updated 03:16 p.m., August 16, 2008

    BEIJING ' Swedish wrestler Ara Abrahamian was disqualified and
    stripped of his bronze medal for dropping the prize in protest after a
    disputed loss.

    Abrahamian was punished by the International Olympic Committee for
    violating the spirit of fair play during the medal ceremony, becoming
    the fourth athlete kicked out of the Games and bringing the number of
    medals removed to three.

    Abrahamian became incensed when a disputed penalty call decided his
    semifinal match against Italian Andrea Minguzzi, who went on to win
    the gold in the Greco-Roman 84-kilogram division Thursday.

    During the medal ceremony, the Armenian-born Abrahamian, who also lost
    a 2004 Olympic semifinal match on a disputed call, took the bronze
    medal from around his neck and, angrily, dropped it on the mat as he
    walked away. He didn't take part in the rest of the medal ceremony.

    The IOC executive board ruled Abrahamian's actions amounted to a
    political demonstration and a mark of disrespect to his fellow
    athletes.

    `It was felt that his behavior on the medal podium and during the
    medal ceremony was not appropriate,' IOC spokeswoman Giselle Davies
    said. `His behavior was not in the Olympic spirit of respect for his
    fellow athletes. Whatever grievances you may have, this was not the
    way to go about it.'

    The IOC said no athlete will receive Abrahamian's medal because his
    disqualification wasn't connected to the competition itself, meaning
    there will be only one bronze medalist, Nazmi Avluca of
    Turkey. Normally, there are two at each weight class.

    The 28-year-old Abrahamian had to be restrained from going after
    matside officials after his loss to Minguzzi. He stormed from the area
    where interviews are conducted and slammed a door tothe dressing rooms
    so hard it shook an entire wall. He weighed whether to skip the bronze
    medal match, only to have friends talk him into competing.

    Elsewhere, Saori Yoshida of Japan has won her second successive
    Olympic women's wrestling gold medal at 55 kilograms, pinning Chinese
    teenager Xu Li. Yoshida has lost only one match in her international
    career, to American Marcie Van Dusen earlier this year. She bounced
    back from that loss with a series of easy victories in Beijing to
    become the first women's wrestler to win two Olympic golds.

    Xu, who doesn't turn 19 until December, would have been the youngest
    Olympic wrestling gold medalist in any discipline. She lost the first
    period 2-0, then was pinned by Yoshida 43 seconds into the second.

    Winning the bronze medals were Tonya Verbeek, who earned Canada's
    second wrestling medal of the games, and Jackeline Renteria of
    Colombia. Carol Huynh of Canada earlier won the gold at 48 kg.

    Van Dusen did not place.

    Badminton: Top-seeded Markis Kido and Hendra Setiawan of Indonesia
    have won the gold in men's doubles, beating China's Cai Yun and Fu
    Haifeng in three sets.

    Kido and Setiawan recovered from a shaky start on their way to a win
    against the second-seeded Chinese at Beijing University of Technology
    Gymnasium.

    Defending champion Zhang Ning of China won the gold in women's
    singles, beating top-seeded compatriot Xie Xingfang in three
    sets. Second-seeded Zhang defended the title she won in Athens.

    Indonesia's Maria Kristin Yulianti has won the bronze, beating China's
    Lu Lan.

    Beach volleyball: Jake Gibb and Sean Rosenthal have advanced to the
    quarterfinals with a victory against Spain. The victory against Pablo
    Herrera Allepuz and Raul Mesa kept the U.S. on track for an
    All-American final.

    Cycling: Spain's Joan Llaneras won the men's points race, adding that
    gold to the one he claimed in the event at Sydney, Australia, in 2000
    and the silver won in Athens four years ago.

    Llaneras finished with 60 points, ahead of Germany's Roger Kluge, who
    wound up with 58 for the silver. Britain's Chris Newton won the
    bronze, with 56 points.

    The points race is a complex 160-lap event where riders seek points
    awarded in sprints every 10th time around the velodrome.

    Fencing: Russia won the gold in women's foil fencing with an easy
    28-11 win against the U.S. team. Russia's team of Evgenia Lamonova,
    Victoria Nikichina and Svetlana Boyko simply outdid Americans Emily
    Cross, Hannah Thompson and Erinn Smart through most of the final late
    Saturday.

    Italy beat Hungary 32-23 for the bronze. The U.S. beat Hungary 35-33
    to advance.

    Rowing: Britain continued its dominance in men's four rowing and won
    gold for the third straight Olympics, holding off Australia to win in
    6 minutes, 6.57 seconds.

    Tom James, Steve Williams, Pete Reed and Andrew Triggs Hodge used a
    fantastic sprint over the final 500 meters to make sure that the gold
    medal will stay in Britain for another four years.

    Julien Despres, Benjamin Rondeau, Germain Chardin and Dorian
    Mortelette of France are the bronze medalists after crossing the line
    in 6:09.31.

    Elsewhere, David Crawshay and Scott Brennan of Australia won the gold
    in men's double sculls rowing, leading all the way to win in 6
    minutes, 27.77 seconds.

    Tonu Endrekson and Juri Jaanson of Estonia won the silver
    medal. Britain's Matthew Wells and Stephen Rowbotham are the bronze
    medalists.

    Also, Georgina and Caroline Evers-Swindell of New Zealand won the gold
    in women's double sculls, defending their Athens triumph by
    one-hundredth of a second.

    The twin sisters won in a thrilling finish, nipping Germany's
    Annekatrin Thiele and Christiane Huth at the line. The crowd, which
    was roaring for the final 500 meters, was silent while waiting for the
    result to be posted.

    Drew Ginn and Duncan Free of Australia earned the gold in men's pair
    rowing, using their outstanding technical precision to win by more
    than 2 seconds. David Calder and Scott Frandsen brought Canada its
    first medal of the Games with the silver. New Zealand's Nathan Twaddle
    and George Bridgewater were the bronze medalists.

    Georgeta Andrunache and Viorica Susanu of Romania won gold medal in
    women's pair rowing, bringing their combined career Olympic gold medal
    haul to a nine.

    China won the silver and Belarus the bronze.

    Olaf Tufte of Norway won the gold in men's single sculls, successfully
    defending his first-place finish four years ago in Athens. Tufte
    trailed at the 1,500-meter mark Saturday, only to finish strong down
    the stretch ahead of Ondrej Synek of the Czech Republic. New Zealand's
    Mahe Drysdale was the bronze medalist.

    Drysdale complained of illness earlier this week and was carried off
    the water on a stretcher.

    Rumyana Neykova of Bulgaria won the women's single sculls, pulling
    ahead late to win her first gold medal in the event.

    American Michelle Guerette won the silver medal and Ekaterina Karsten
    of Belarus won the bronze.

    Track: Fani Halkia, the reigning Olympic champion in the women's
    400-meter hurdles, told reporters she was `shocked' to learn she had
    tested positive for the banned substance methyltrienolone and would be
    unable to defend her gold medal.

    Halkia spoke to Greek journalists early Sunday morning at a central
    Beijing hotel. She said she was summoned by the head of Greece's
    Olympic delegation and told of the results of the first sample she
    gave to World Anti-Doping Agency doctors.

    `I am shocked,' she said, according to Greek media reports. `I have
    undergone more testing than anyone else.'

    Halkia was tested a few days before the Games, in Japan, where
    Greece's track and field team had been training. She said she had
    volunteered to take part in the World Anti-Doping Agency's pilot
    program in which athletes submit themselves voluntarily to regular
    testing.

    Halkia, who has moved out of the Olympic Village, said she was sorry
    she couldn't take part in the Games and that she had expected to make
    the 400-meter hurdles final.

    Preliminaries in that event were scheduled to begin Sunday afternoon.

    Halkia said she didn't know how the banned substance was found in her
    sample, but she didn't reply to questions about Dimitrios Regas, a
    400-meter runner who shares the same coach with Halkia and who tested
    positive for methyltrienolone before the Olympics.

    Fifteen Greek athletes, including Halkia, have tested positive for
    methyltrienolone. They include 11 weightlifters, swimmer Yannis
    Drymonakos, Regas and sprinter Tassos Gousis, who was sent home a few
    days before the Olympics. The IOC also has barred sprinter Katerina
    Thanou from the Games for her role in a drug-testing scandal at the
    Athens Games four years ago.

    Weightlifting: Super heavyweight Jang Mi-ran has broken three world
    records to claim South Korea's second weightlifting gold in Beijing
    and the unofficial title of the world's strongest woman.

    Jang set world records Saturday in the snatch as well as the clean and
    jerk. Her total score of 326 kilograms (718.7 pounds) beat the
    previous world record by 7 kilograms (15.4 pounds).

    European champion Olha Korobka of Ukraine won the silver, and Mariya
    Grabovetskaya of Kazakhstan took the bronze.

    Jang, who has dominated the weight class in recent years, snatched 140
    kg (308.6 pounds) and heaved 186 kg (410.1 pounds) in the clean and
    jerk.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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