Current:Home > ContactScoring inquiry errors might have cost Simone Biles another Olympic gold medal -VitalWealth Strategies
Scoring inquiry errors might have cost Simone Biles another Olympic gold medal
View
Date:2025-04-18 08:45:34
The floor exercise final at the Paris Olympics was even more screwed up than already known.
Video submitted Monday as part of Jordan Chiles’ appeal to the Swiss Federal Tribunal indicates a scoring inquiry for Simone Biles’ routine in the floor final was never registered, likely costing the Olympic champion another gold medal. Biles won the silver medal, finishing just 0.033 points behind Rebeca Andrade of Brazil.
“Honestly not a big deal for me, Rebeca had a better floor anyways,” Biles said Tuesday, adding a hand-heart emoji, after someone on X, formerly Twitter, pointed out issues with the inquiries for both Biles and Jordan Chiles.
“Upsetting how it wasn’t processed but I’m not mad at the results.”
Biles’s 14.133 in the floor final included a 6.9 for difficulty. Had she gotten full credit for her split leap, however, it would have given her an additional 0.10 in difficulty and a 14.233. That would have put her ahead of Andrade, who scored a 14.166.
But in the video submitted with Chiles’ appeal, Biles asks coach Cecile Landi, “Is he asking?” Landi replies, “He said he did.” After Laurent Landi, Landi’s husband and co-coach, says several things in French, Cecile Landi turns to Biles and says, “They didn’t send it,” and raises her arms in a gesture of helplessness.
Landi then asks her husband, “What about Jordan? You want to try?”
The video was provided to Chiles by director Katie Walsh and production company Religion of Sports, who received special permission to film in Bercy Arena as part of Biles' latest documentary project, "Simone Biles: Rising." The first two episodes of the docuseries were released on Netflix prior to the 2024 Paris Olympics and two more are still to come later this year.
Landi did submit an inquiry for Chiles, saying Chiles did not get full credit for her split leap. A review panel agreed, increasing Chiles’ score by 0.10 points and giving her the bronze medal ahead of Romania’s Ana Barbosu.
Romania appealed to the Court of Arbitration for Sport, claiming Chiles’ scoring inquiry was not made in time. CAS agreed, citing data from Omega showing the inquiry was registered four seconds too late, and ordered the results of the floor final to be changed. As a result, Chiles was stripped of her bronze medal on the final day of the Paris Olympics.
Read more about the athletes you love: Sign up for USA TODAY's Sports newsletter.
But the rules say Chiles had 60 seconds to make a verbal inquiry, not that the inquiry had to be registered within 60 seconds. During the CAS hearing last month, the FIG acknowledged there were no mechanisms in place to record when verbal inquiries were received.
In the time-stamped video, however, Landi clearly says, “Inquiry for Jordan,” twice before the 60 seconds have elapsed.
That Chiles was wrongly denied the bronze medal seemed to bother Biles a lot more than her not having another gold medal.
“BUT JUSTICE FOR JORDAN,” the seven-time Olympic champion said Tuesday in her post on X, adding four emojis of a person speaking. “ya hear me!!!!!!!!!!!!!!”
veryGood! (1818)
Related
- 'As foretold in the prophecy': Elon Musk and internet react as Tesla stock hits $420 all
- Kate Spade 24-Hour Flash Deal: Get This $240 Crossbody Bag for Just $59
- Oyster reefs in Texas are disappearing. Fishermen there fear their jobs will too
- Why Meghan Markle Isn't Attending King Charles III's Coronation With Prince Harry
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- A sighting reveals extinction and climate change in a single image
- An estimated 45,000 people have been displaced by a cyclone in Madagascar
- Record-breaking heat, flooding, wildfires and monsoons are slamming the world. Experts say it's only begun.
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- Farmers in Senegal learn to respect a scruffy shrub that gets no respect
Ranking
- Trump's 'stop
- Nicola Sturgeon: How can small countries have a global impact?
- Climate change is killing people, but there's still time to reverse the damage
- Carlos Alcaraz defeats Novak Djokovic in epic Wimbledon showdown
- US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
- Silver Linings From The UN's Dire Climate Change Report
- More than 30 dead as floods, landslides engulf South Korea
- Climate change is killing people, but there's still time to reverse the damage
Recommendation
Taylor Swift Eras Archive site launches on singer's 35th birthday. What is it?
Sabrina Carpenter Cancels Portland Concert Due to “Credible Threat”
Kuwait to distribute 100,000 copies of Quran in Sweden after Muslim holy book desecrated at one-man protest
Ukrainian troops near Bakhmut use Howitzers from U.S. to pin Russians in a trap
North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
The U.S. pledged billions to fight climate change. Then came the Ukraine war
How can we tap into the vast power of geothermal energy?
Thousands evacuate worst Australian floods in decades