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最新消息-纽约时报-French Judge Says Pressure Was From Canada and she never dealt with Russian judges or their federation.

本文发表在 rolia.net 枫下论坛February 24, 2002

French Judge Says Pressure Was From Canada
By SELENA ROBERTS and MICHAEL JANOFSKY

ALT LAKE CITY, Feb. 23 ?The French judge at the center of the Olympic figure skating storm said today that from the moment she was named an Olympic judge, she was the target of an extraordinary lobbying effort to secure her vote for a Canadian pair.

The judge, Marie Reine Le Gougne, said the pressure she felt was unlike any in her 14 years of judging, that it intensified as the Olympics drew near and that it came from one country, Canada.

Le Gougne, 40, a former skater from Strasbourg, made her assertions during a two-hour interview, conducted in English, in her lawyer's office here. It was her most extensive public explanation of events since she scored a Russian pair over a Canadian couple for the gold medal on Feb. 11. Her entire account was not independently verifiable, but two high-ranking Western figure skating officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, say they believe her version of events.

A senior Canadian official dismissed any suggestion that Canadians tried to influence the outcome in the pairs event. "I have no reason to believe Canada is involved," said Michael Chambers, the president of the Canadian Olympic Association. "Nothing leads me to believe that it's true."

Four days after the pairs final, Le Gougne was suspended by the International Skating Union, the sport's governing body, which accused her of failing to report pressure on her but did not specify who might have pressured her. The I.S.U. awarded duplicate gold medals to the Canadians, Jamie Sal?and David Pelletier, joining the Russian winners, Yelena Berezhnaya and Anton Sikharulidze.

Le Gougne said the lobbying effort was led by senior skating officials from Canada and at least one powerful official with the I.S.U. with ties to Canada. "They needed my vote," said Le Gougne, who had built a distinguished reputation as a fair and impartial judge. "It was going to be very close. I was in the middle."

But after voting "with my heart and soul," Le Gougne said, she was turned into a pariah, portrayed by those who disagreed with her as a pawn who caved to pressure from Russian interests. She vehemently denied this, saying, "I never dealt with Russian judges or their federation."

In describing the pressure and the reaction to her vote, Le Gougne painted a vivid picture of the highly politicized interior of big-time figure skating, a world in which a pat on the back, a casual smile or even an invitation to a birthday party can be part of a subtle campaign to draw favor for one skater or diminish the stature of another.

But the darkest part of that world, Le Gougne said, was her realization that she had nowhere to turn for help. She said that many of those lobbying her were the same people who control the careers of judges and influence their ascent to important international committees. "They have all the power to decide about your career, about promotion and so on," she said. "That is why all judges are so scared. It's about your career. I was trapped."

In figure skating, Canada exerts considerable influence at the highest levels. Sally Stapleford, a British citizen whose father was the Canadian hockey player Harvey (Red) Stapleford, has several alliances with Canadian figure skating. Stapleford is also chairwoman of the I.S.U.'s most powerful body, the technical committee, which oversees judging.

The skating union is also using a Canadian-based company to refine technologies of a new scoring system.

And for at least the last five years, the I.S.U. has brought in the choreographers Lori Nichol, who works with Sal?and Pelletier, and Anne Schelter, a Canadian, to direct seminars on presentation, the more subjective mark of the two sets of scores skaters receive. Le Gougne said she believes that these kinds of relationships helped build support for Sal?and Pelletier.

Le Gougne said judges were routinely lobbied for one skater or another and often the effort was friendly, like when American officials praised United States skaters in front of her.

"But that was on a different level," she said, comparing such remarks to the more confrontational encounters she experienced on behalf of Sal?and Pelletier.

Campaigning for the Canadians, she said, began in September, when she was named a pairs judge for the Olympics. Instantly, she said, her circle of friends expanded. "I became very important," she said. "People who had never talked to me before, suddenly they were so kind, so attentive," she said. "`O.K., I understand the message.' "

Subtle nudges turned into overt pressure in the days leading up to the pairs final. On the night before the short program, she said, the Canadian judge for the pairs competition, Benoit Lavoie, invited her along with about 10 other people, including two officials from the technical committee, to a birthday party for a Polish judge on the panel for the ice dancing competition. The judge was close friends with the Polish judge on the pairs panel, she said. At the party, guests brought gifts and made Champagne toasts.

"I was shocked," Le Gougne said. "It was clear their aim, their objective, was to get the vote of the Polish judge."

As she watched the Russians accept their gold medals, Le Gougne said she felt at peace. But she said her serenity was quickly shattered through a series of aggressive encounters before the night was over.

Over the next 24 hours, Le Gougne said she was physically accosted by an unknown person on the arena floor, verbally attacked by Walburga Grimm, a member of the technical committee, on the shuttle bus to her hotel and again by Stapleford in the hotel lobby.

Le Gougne said Stapleford "aggressively approached me" and said, " `Marie, you're a very, very good judge. Why did you score the Russians first?' "

Le Gougne said she was at the breaking point and began to cry. Stapleford, Le Gougne said, began to "take advantage of my emotional situation" and verbally began constructing a scenario to explain why Le Gougne had voted for the Russians: the French federation had pressured her to vote against the Canadians.

At that point, she said, Stapleford was joined by two other members of the technical committee ?Grimm and Britta Lindgren ?and began telling them of this scenario. Repeated efforts to reach Stapleford were unsuccessful, but last week she denied ever coercing Le Gougne and described her as "emotionally fragile."

By the morning after the final, Le Gougne had become famous. "I turn on CNN and I see myself ?between Bush and Afghanistan," she said. "How can this be?"

The gravity of the situation became more apparent later that morning at a scheduled meeting for judges at the arena. Halfway through, Le Gougne said, the pairs referee, Ron Pfenning, an American who knew of Stapleford's version of events from the night before ?that Le Gougne had been pressured by her federation ?passed around a note to the nine judges that suggested "anyone who voted for the Russians is dishonest," Le Gougne said.

"That word, dishonest, destroyed me," she said, recalling a moment when she and the other judges who supported the Russians began to cry. "He congratulated the judges who chose the Canadian couple and treated us as dishonest. But in my mind it was clear, I was the target."

Once the notes were returned, Le Gougne said she lost her ability to fight her accusers anymore. She agreed ?under duress, she said ?to Stapleford's version of what happened at the pairs competition.

"I was so mixed up in my mind, I had trouble thinking properly," Le Gougne said.

Pfenning left Salt Lake City on Friday, but had said in an earlier interview that he only reported to the I.S.U. what Le Gougne told everyone in the meeting.

Today, Le Gougne said that giving in was her biggest mistake, that it undermined her ability to defend herself, even though she subsequently tried to tell her side of the story in an interview with the French sports daily, L'Equipe.

Le Gougne's professional future now depends on a hearing in April, when the results of an internal investigation by the I.S.U. will be reviewed, making the organization, effectively, her judge and jury. The episode has left her disillusioned, but still determined to return a sport she has loved since she began skating at age 6.

"My life now is before Salt Lake City and after Salt Lake City," Le Gougne said. "I feel really comfortable. I have told the truth. My mind is very clear."更多精彩文章及讨论,请光临枫下论坛 rolia.net
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  • 枫下沙龙 / 谈天说地 / 加拿大人可真能整--揭开冬奥双人滑追授冠军内幕[zt]
    本文发表在 rolia.net 枫下论坛加拿大人可真能整--揭开冬奥双人滑追授冠军内幕

    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    http://sports.sina.com.cn 2002年02月17日11:21 新浪体育

      加拿大双人滑选手萨莱/佩勒蒂埃被追加冠军,爆出本届冬奥会开幕以来最大新闻(或丑闻)。对此,1999年饱受裁判之苦,痛失世界冠军的申雪感慨地说,“加拿大人可真能整”。确实,让一天前还在说裁判结果不容更改的国际滑冰联盟,忽然来个180度大转弯,加拿大没点整事的真功夫,那可不行。

      北京时间大年初一双人滑比赛一结束,加拿大代表团负责人钱伯斯立即召集紧急会议
    ,商讨对策。经过磋商,加拿大代表团将奋斗目标锁定在为萨/佩另行补发金牌,而不是挤掉俄罗斯的金牌。目标确定后,加代表团开始数管齐下,同时打出形象牌,媒体牌,公关牌,政治牌和法律牌。

      形象牌由运动员自己去打。长得有点像前美国冰后世界亚军卡里根的萨莱虽不算绝色美女,但形象清新,敢哭敢笑,自有可爱之处。高大而面带憨厚神色的佩勒蒂埃英语法语全会,而且颇有幽默感。这一对自从决赛之后,一天也没闲着,在美加英语法语电视等媒体上天天爆光,只谈理想和奋斗,从不大骂裁判,一时大获媒体青睐。

      媒体牌加拿大一呼百拥。加国电视天天播放萨佩“完美无缺的表演”,同时一遍遍重播俄罗斯选手的那个失误镜头,只播那个失误镜头。一向以蛊惑人心,大爆猛料为乐的美国媒体当然也不甘落后。毕竟,加国得奖不影响美国利益;加国更是美国在世界上最忠诚的朋友。而且,挤掉加国的俄罗斯,在美国媒体的潜意识里,也许还是“战略竞争对手”。

      公关牌由加拿大奥委会出面。加拿大在国际奥委会还是有人缘的。加拿大人庞德是前国际奥委会副主席,国际奥委会主席竞选中刚刚输给了现任主席罗格。从本届冬奥会开始前后加国记者对罗格的采访中,可以看出,罗格似乎对加拿大怀有歉意,或者说需要团结庞德的众多支持者。钱伯斯亲自出马,在国际奥委会活动。同时,加拿大向俄罗斯解释,加拿大的目标不影响俄罗斯利益。

      政治牌是加拿大全国上下一起打。比赛一结束,加拿大就强烈要求国际滑联公开调查裁判问题。加奥委会正式递交了书面要求。在国际滑联拒绝公开调查后,加奥委会游说国际奥委会插手。正像布什成功地让罗格支持美国反恐战争一样,加国成功地让罗格支持加国的裁判调查要求。但是到底裁判有什么把柄值得调查?美加一些媒体先把火力对准中国裁判杨家声。也许他们认为,反正一有问题就说是中国捣的乱,容易引起共鸣。

      好了,活耙子终于自己来了!据说法国裁判勒古涅在赛后的例行裁判总结会上,自言自语说,“你们不懂!你们不懂!压力是巨大的!压力真大啊,我国奥委会,主席迪蒂埃(伽拉盖)向我施压,让我把俄国人排第一!你们得帮帮我!你们得帮帮我!”(但勒古涅否认讲过这些话)。有了这样的猛料,伟大的美利坚及各国记者当然不用再看别的比赛了。于是国际奥委会的办公旅馆里外成天是四五百记者。国际奥委会还想办公吗?

      法律牌加国奥委会一开始觉得先不出。法国裁判猛料出来后,加国奥委会开始动用律师,要将国际滑联告上法庭。国际体育仲裁法庭是国际奥委会设立但独立于国际奥委会的国际司法机构,专门仲裁体育运动中的各种问题。钱伯斯知道法庭主管法律问题,不一定插手事实问题,但仍然决定要走向法庭,以对国际滑联和国际奥委会进一步施加压力。

      成功了,终于成功了。国际滑联在国际奥委会和广大媒体的巨大压力下,终于宣布放弃抵抗。他们同意了加拿大一开始就提出的方案,给加拿大另行补发金牌。国际奥委会执委会迅速表决。俄罗斯代表弃权,表决的结果是7-1通过。加拿大方面相信,唯一反对的一票,来自中国代表何振梁。

      下一步呢?下一步是萨莱/佩勒蒂埃在本周女子单人滑冰比赛结束后,出席为他们举行的颁奖仪式。萨莱说了,她的梦想就是要在冬奥冰场听加拿大国歌,而且要站在领奖台中央。问题是,谁将站到两边去陪她和佩勒蒂埃领奖?

      当国际奥委会主席罗格和国际滑联主席辛昆塔宣布追授加国金牌的消息传到莫斯科,正在那里率领“加拿大团队”访问的加国首相克雷蒂安只说了一句,“哈里路亚!”(北极洲)更多精彩文章及讨论,请光临枫下论坛 rolia.net
    • 没有响应?为什么何振良要投反对票?
    • 这么多人跑到北美来移民,不就因为加拿大人,美国人吃不得亏么
    • 看了加拿大的做法,虽然很多人不满,但是我们得承认,这就是爱国。虽然加拿大的全国生产总值比不上中国了,军队也没有中国强大,但是只要看看中国政府对着菲律宾都缩头缩脑的样子,就知道什麽才算是强大了。
      换了是中国选手,顶多报纸上登一些抗议的报道,然后就像啥事都没有发生一样。
      • 通过这些小事,美国人,加拿大人就是在告诉全世界,欺负别人行,但别惹着我,再有人做都要先琢磨琢磨,有什么不理解的
    • 哈哈, 和你们唱唱反调. 我认为加拿大人这次不仅赢了金牌,而且赢了无法无天的裁判,佩服! 最讨厌裁判滥用权威主导比赛,和贪官差不多.
    • 最新消息-纽约时报-French Judge Says Pressure Was From Canada and she never dealt with Russian judges or their federation.
      本文发表在 rolia.net 枫下论坛February 24, 2002

      French Judge Says Pressure Was From Canada
      By SELENA ROBERTS and MICHAEL JANOFSKY

      ALT LAKE CITY, Feb. 23 ?The French judge at the center of the Olympic figure skating storm said today that from the moment she was named an Olympic judge, she was the target of an extraordinary lobbying effort to secure her vote for a Canadian pair.

      The judge, Marie Reine Le Gougne, said the pressure she felt was unlike any in her 14 years of judging, that it intensified as the Olympics drew near and that it came from one country, Canada.

      Le Gougne, 40, a former skater from Strasbourg, made her assertions during a two-hour interview, conducted in English, in her lawyer's office here. It was her most extensive public explanation of events since she scored a Russian pair over a Canadian couple for the gold medal on Feb. 11. Her entire account was not independently verifiable, but two high-ranking Western figure skating officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, say they believe her version of events.

      A senior Canadian official dismissed any suggestion that Canadians tried to influence the outcome in the pairs event. "I have no reason to believe Canada is involved," said Michael Chambers, the president of the Canadian Olympic Association. "Nothing leads me to believe that it's true."

      Four days after the pairs final, Le Gougne was suspended by the International Skating Union, the sport's governing body, which accused her of failing to report pressure on her but did not specify who might have pressured her. The I.S.U. awarded duplicate gold medals to the Canadians, Jamie Sal?and David Pelletier, joining the Russian winners, Yelena Berezhnaya and Anton Sikharulidze.

      Le Gougne said the lobbying effort was led by senior skating officials from Canada and at least one powerful official with the I.S.U. with ties to Canada. "They needed my vote," said Le Gougne, who had built a distinguished reputation as a fair and impartial judge. "It was going to be very close. I was in the middle."

      But after voting "with my heart and soul," Le Gougne said, she was turned into a pariah, portrayed by those who disagreed with her as a pawn who caved to pressure from Russian interests. She vehemently denied this, saying, "I never dealt with Russian judges or their federation."

      In describing the pressure and the reaction to her vote, Le Gougne painted a vivid picture of the highly politicized interior of big-time figure skating, a world in which a pat on the back, a casual smile or even an invitation to a birthday party can be part of a subtle campaign to draw favor for one skater or diminish the stature of another.

      But the darkest part of that world, Le Gougne said, was her realization that she had nowhere to turn for help. She said that many of those lobbying her were the same people who control the careers of judges and influence their ascent to important international committees. "They have all the power to decide about your career, about promotion and so on," she said. "That is why all judges are so scared. It's about your career. I was trapped."

      In figure skating, Canada exerts considerable influence at the highest levels. Sally Stapleford, a British citizen whose father was the Canadian hockey player Harvey (Red) Stapleford, has several alliances with Canadian figure skating. Stapleford is also chairwoman of the I.S.U.'s most powerful body, the technical committee, which oversees judging.

      The skating union is also using a Canadian-based company to refine technologies of a new scoring system.

      And for at least the last five years, the I.S.U. has brought in the choreographers Lori Nichol, who works with Sal?and Pelletier, and Anne Schelter, a Canadian, to direct seminars on presentation, the more subjective mark of the two sets of scores skaters receive. Le Gougne said she believes that these kinds of relationships helped build support for Sal?and Pelletier.

      Le Gougne said judges were routinely lobbied for one skater or another and often the effort was friendly, like when American officials praised United States skaters in front of her.

      "But that was on a different level," she said, comparing such remarks to the more confrontational encounters she experienced on behalf of Sal?and Pelletier.

      Campaigning for the Canadians, she said, began in September, when she was named a pairs judge for the Olympics. Instantly, she said, her circle of friends expanded. "I became very important," she said. "People who had never talked to me before, suddenly they were so kind, so attentive," she said. "`O.K., I understand the message.' "

      Subtle nudges turned into overt pressure in the days leading up to the pairs final. On the night before the short program, she said, the Canadian judge for the pairs competition, Benoit Lavoie, invited her along with about 10 other people, including two officials from the technical committee, to a birthday party for a Polish judge on the panel for the ice dancing competition. The judge was close friends with the Polish judge on the pairs panel, she said. At the party, guests brought gifts and made Champagne toasts.

      "I was shocked," Le Gougne said. "It was clear their aim, their objective, was to get the vote of the Polish judge."

      As she watched the Russians accept their gold medals, Le Gougne said she felt at peace. But she said her serenity was quickly shattered through a series of aggressive encounters before the night was over.

      Over the next 24 hours, Le Gougne said she was physically accosted by an unknown person on the arena floor, verbally attacked by Walburga Grimm, a member of the technical committee, on the shuttle bus to her hotel and again by Stapleford in the hotel lobby.

      Le Gougne said Stapleford "aggressively approached me" and said, " `Marie, you're a very, very good judge. Why did you score the Russians first?' "

      Le Gougne said she was at the breaking point and began to cry. Stapleford, Le Gougne said, began to "take advantage of my emotional situation" and verbally began constructing a scenario to explain why Le Gougne had voted for the Russians: the French federation had pressured her to vote against the Canadians.

      At that point, she said, Stapleford was joined by two other members of the technical committee ?Grimm and Britta Lindgren ?and began telling them of this scenario. Repeated efforts to reach Stapleford were unsuccessful, but last week she denied ever coercing Le Gougne and described her as "emotionally fragile."

      By the morning after the final, Le Gougne had become famous. "I turn on CNN and I see myself ?between Bush and Afghanistan," she said. "How can this be?"

      The gravity of the situation became more apparent later that morning at a scheduled meeting for judges at the arena. Halfway through, Le Gougne said, the pairs referee, Ron Pfenning, an American who knew of Stapleford's version of events from the night before ?that Le Gougne had been pressured by her federation ?passed around a note to the nine judges that suggested "anyone who voted for the Russians is dishonest," Le Gougne said.

      "That word, dishonest, destroyed me," she said, recalling a moment when she and the other judges who supported the Russians began to cry. "He congratulated the judges who chose the Canadian couple and treated us as dishonest. But in my mind it was clear, I was the target."

      Once the notes were returned, Le Gougne said she lost her ability to fight her accusers anymore. She agreed ?under duress, she said ?to Stapleford's version of what happened at the pairs competition.

      "I was so mixed up in my mind, I had trouble thinking properly," Le Gougne said.

      Pfenning left Salt Lake City on Friday, but had said in an earlier interview that he only reported to the I.S.U. what Le Gougne told everyone in the meeting.

      Today, Le Gougne said that giving in was her biggest mistake, that it undermined her ability to defend herself, even though she subsequently tried to tell her side of the story in an interview with the French sports daily, L'Equipe.

      Le Gougne's professional future now depends on a hearing in April, when the results of an internal investigation by the I.S.U. will be reviewed, making the organization, effectively, her judge and jury. The episode has left her disillusioned, but still determined to return a sport she has loved since she began skating at age 6.

      "My life now is before Salt Lake City and after Salt Lake City," Le Gougne said. "I feel really comfortable. I have told the truth. My mind is very clear."更多精彩文章及讨论,请光临枫下论坛 rolia.net
      • ^ These Canadians are really ugly.