Friday, February 26, 2010

Investigation: 1 Chinese gymnast underage in 2000

Friday, February 26, 2010
FILE - In this Sept. 19, 2000 file photo, Chinese gymnasts Yang Yun, left, and Dong Fangxiao wave flowers after receiving the bronze medal in the women's gymnastic team finals at the 2000 Summer Olympic Games in Sydney. China should be stripped of its bronze medal from the 2000 Olympics because Dong has been found to be underage, international gymnastics officials said Friday Feb 26, 2008. Dong was 14 during the Sydney Games, the International Gymnastics Federation said Friday. Gymnasts must be 16 during the Olympic year to compete.
Amy Sancetta, File / AP Photo 
 
The international gymnastics officials who cleared China's team of age violations during the Beijing Games now say the country should return an Olympics bronze medal it won 10 years ago because one of its athletes was only 14 at the time.
The International Gymnastics Federation "cancelled" all of Dong Fangxiao's results from the 2000 Sydney Games and recommended that the International Olympic Committee strip the Chinese of their medal. Yang Yun, who won a bronze on uneven bars, also was suspected of being as young as 14 in Sydney, but there was insufficient evidence to prove her age had been falsified. FIG, instead, gave her a warning.
The IOC has said it would take "necessary measures" if any gymnasts were found to be underage. The United States finished fourth in Sydney.
"We can confirm that we have received the ruling from the FIG in the case concerning Dong Fangxiao and Yang Yun, and we take due note of their decision," IOC spokesman Mark Adams said. "Clearly, we need to take time to consider the findings before the executive board can consider the matter. We would like to thank the FIG for their work and we would refer further inquiries to them."
China must pay the costs of the investigations "for not having adequately controlled the birth dates of the gymnasts," the FIG said. The investigation included two days of hearings in December at its headquarters in Lausanne, Switzerland. Zhang Haifeng, the Chinese Olympic Committee's press attache at the Vancouver Games, called the decision an "old story."
"That was in 2000. Now is 2010," he said. "This was 10 years ago."
Questions about Dong and Yang's eligibility arose during the FIG's investigation into the eligibility of the Chinese team that won the gold medal at the Beijing Games. Media reports and Internet records suggested some of the girls on that team could have been as young as 14.
The FIG cleared the Beijing Games gymnasts in October 2008 after Chinese officials provided original passports, ID cards and family registers showing all of the gymnasts were old enough to compete. But the FIG said it wasn't satisfied with "the explanations and evidence provided to date" for Dong and Yang.
"I'm happy to know that justice is being served," said Dominique Dawes, a member of the U.S. team in 2000. "There are rules in place and, if they are broken, there should be penalties."
Dong's results from the 1999 world championships, where China won a bronze medal and she was sixth in the all-around, also will be wiped out, the FIG said.
The U.S. Olympic Committee declined to comment. Steve Penny, president of USA Gymnastics, praised the investigation.
"This is an extremely hard issue to try to address," he said. "The FIG has done a very responsible thing."
Dong's accreditation information for the Beijing Olympics, where she worked as a national technical official, listed her birthday as Jan. 23, 1986. That would have made her 14 in Sydney - too young to compete. Her birth date in the FIG database is listed as Jan. 20, 1983.
Dong's blog also said she was born in the Year of the Ox in the Chinese zodiac, which dates from Feb. 20, 1985, to Feb. 8, 1986. Dong has not denied that, but she refused to answer questions about her age, telling The Associated Press, "I've left the gymnastics team."
Yang, who also won a bronze medal on uneven bars in 2000, said in a June 2007 interview that aired on state broadcaster China Central Television that she was 14 in Sydney.

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