Zion on the 'Dream Team'? Athletes
confused over qualifying for Games
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[April 02, 2020]
By Steve Keating
(Reuters) - The decision to delay the
Tokyo Olympics by a year is sparking both anxiety and hope among the
world's athletes as the coronavirus pandemic adds to confusion over
who might qualify for the Games, now in 2021.
Legal experts warned of a Pandora's Box of messy legal challenges
from athletes in the lead-up to the Games, as sporting bodies
consider tweaks to qualifying criteria that could impact who gets in
and who misses out.
"I'm sure there will be additions/subtractions," said USA Basketball
chief communications officer Craig Miller about the names on
America's 'Dream Team' list.
"For example, I could see Zion Williamson being considered if he
stays healthy and continues his strong play," he said of the first
overall pick in the 2019 National Basketball Association draft who
plays for the New Orleans Pelicans.
The International Golf Federation will use world rankings to
determine the Olympic field. Those could look very different in a
year from now, potentially opening the door for Tiger Woods, who
missed much of the season with back issues.
The International Olympic Committee (IOC) has said that the 57% of
athletes who had already qualified for the 2020 Tokyo Games would
keep their spots in 2021.
But after first enduring the emotional grinder of not knowing if the
2020 Games would go ahead as planned or how to prepare, for the
nearly 5,000 athletes who have not earned their place the
cancellation of the global sports calendar threatens to disrupt the
qualifying process late into the year and beyond.
With pools, tracks and training facilities shut, along with
widespread self-isolation orders around the globe, many sports
federations were unable to provide a clear picture of what
qualifying will look like.
LEGAL CHALLENGES
Some issues are logistical, like those facing USA swimming and
gymnastics, which may have to secure new Olympic trial venues.
Others are less straightforward.
To book a ticket to Tokyo, many athletes must still meet Olympic
standards and/or accumulate enough ranking points in qualifying
competitions to be eligible for selection. But the opportunities to
do so could be severely limited by the pandemic.
That, warns attorney Howard Jacobs, who has represented cyclist
Floyd Landis and sprinters Marion Jones and Tim Montgomery, could
lead to a slew of litigation.
"There are a number of ways that challenges can be brought," Jacobs
told Reuters.
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Thomas Bach, President of the International Olympic Committee (IOC)
attends an interview after the decision to postpone the Tokyo 2020
because of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak, in Lausanne,
Switzerland, March 25, 2020. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse
"Let's say a U.S. athlete who qualified in the marathon at the
Olympic trials in February... say they don't run the standard under
the new window," he said. "Potentially they would be out. I would
think they would now have the ability to challenge that in the Court
of Arbitration for Sport."
The IOC appears to have offered already qualified athletes some
protection. But National Olympic Committees (NOC) and sporting
federations indicated to Reuters that that is not the IOC's decision
to make.
The assurances the IOC can offer are primarily connected to the
number of spots allocated for each sport. Not who will fill them.
"Each nation (member federation) has the right to name its team
members according to its own manner and procedures – provided that
the athletes selected have met World Athletics and IOC qualifying
standards and regulations," U.S. Track and Field said in email,
adding that it is just beginning to weigh the factors in what a
revamped qualifying system will look like.
The IOC was asked by Reuters if it would force NOCs to honor its
guarantee but did not receive a response.
South Korea and Australia have called on FIFA, world soccer's
governing body, to raise the under-23 age limit for the men's
Olympic tournament by a year so players who helped their squads
qualify for the Tokyo Games can remain eligible.
The postponement will also allow teams more time to evaluate talent
and strategy, meaning that in the cut-throat pursuit of medals some
athletes could suddenly find themselves on the outside.
With the prospect of a possible retooling of Olympic rosters, some
athletes have warned selectors not to mess with those who have
secured Olympic spots.
American marathoner Des Linden is a two-time Olympian who finished
fourth in the U.S. trials in Atlanta in February, narrowly missing
out on Tokyo selection. She was adamant that the results should
stand even though a redo would give her another shot at a Tokyo
ticket.
"Anybody suggesting the Marathon Trials be re-run, just stop,"
tweeted Linden. "Please don't crap on their parade."
(Reporting by Steve Keating in Toronto. Additional reporting Gene
Cherry and Andrew Both in Raleigh, North Carolina, Rory Carrrol in
Los Angeles, Amy Tennery in New York, Frank Pingue in Toronto,
Karolos Grohmann in Athens, Ian Ransom in Melbourne; Editing by Bill
Berkrot)
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