Jordan Chiles’ Olympic Bronze Medal in Jeopardy After Floor Exercise Score Reversed

Jordan Chiles may lose the bronze medal she won for her floor exercise at the 2024 Olympics, as the Court of Arbitration for Sport has reversed an inquiry from Team USA that had raised her score.

Jordan Chiles may lose the bronze medal she was awarded at the 2024 Paris Olympics, the only individual Olympic medal she has ever received.

On Aug. 10, the Court of Arbitration for Sport reversed an inquiry from Team USA’s coach that had led to the score for the gymnast’s Beyoncé-inspired floor exercise in the women’s individual final at the ongoing 2024 Paris Olympics to be raised from 13.666 to 13.766, which had boosted her from fifth to third place to win the bronze.

The Swiss-based court ruled that the inquiry should not have been granted because it was submitted four seconds past a one-minute deadline and said Chiles’ initial lower score will be reinstated.

After the decision was published, the International Gymnastics Federation said in a statement that the results of the competition had been amended accordingly, with Chiles’ initial score of 13.666 reinstated and Romanian gymnast Ana Maria Barbosu now ranking third with her score of 13.700. The group did not say whether Chiles would be stripped of her bronze medal.

The court had made its ruling in response to an appeal by the Romanian Gymnastics Federation, Barbosu and teammate Sabrina Maneca-Voinea, had received the same score. They had initially placed fourth and fifth in the floor exercise final, respectively, and had requested that they and Chiles tie for third and all receive bronze medals.

Jordan, who ranked on the podium in the Aug. 5 competition below U.S. teammate Simone Biles and gold medalist Rebeca Andrade from Brazil, shared a series of broken heart emojis on her Instagram Stories after the court released its ruling.

The 23-year-old, who has amid the controversy received a slew of hateful comments online from many users supporting the Romanian competitors, added, “I am taking this time and removing myself from social media for my mental health thank you.”

In a joint statement, USA Gymnastics and the U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee said they were “devastated” by the court’s ruling.

“The inquiry into the difficulty value of Jordan Chiles’ floor exercise routine was filed in good faith,” they wrote in an Instagram post, “and, we believed, in accordance with FIG rules to ensure accurate scoring.”

Jordan, who helped Team USA win a gold medal in the women’s gymnastics team finals at the Paris Olympics and silver at the 2020 Tokyo Olympic Games in 2021, has also received supportive messages on social media from her sister Jazmin Chiles and teammate Suni Lee.

Meanwhile, the Romanian Gymnastics Federation applauded the court’s ruling on Instagram and legendary retired Romanian gymnast Nadia Comaneci expressed her support for the idea of a tie for third place.

“That will be the perfect decision,” the five-time Olympic gold medalist wrote on her Instagram Stories. “3 bronze medals for the ladies.”

Look back at more controversies that have erupted at the 2024 Paris Olympics…

Jordan Chiles Medal Controversy

After the U.S. gymnast won bronze in the women’s gymnastics individual floor exercise final, the Romanian Gymnastics Federation and Romanian finalists Ana Maria Barbosu and Sabrina Maneca-Voinea, who came in fourth and fifth place, filed an appeal with the Court of Arbitration for Sport.

The Romanian side argued that an inquiry that Team USA had submitted at the competition that had led to Chiles’ score to be raised to 13.766 should not have been granted because it was submitted four seconds past a one-minute deadline.

The court agreed and ruled that the U.S. athlete’s initial score of 13.666 would be reinstated, a decision also adopted later by the International Gymnastics Federation, which said in a statement that it had modified the rankings to put Barbosu in third place.

Canada Boots Women’s Soccer Coach

The 2024 Olympics had barely begun when Bev Priestman, head coach of the  Canadian women’s soccer team, was removed from her post by Canada Soccer after her staff was accused of using drones to spy on the New Zealand team ahead of their group stage match.

“Additional information has come to our attention regarding previous drone use against opponents, predating the Paris 2024 Olympic Games,” Canada Soccer CEO and general secretary Kevin Blue said in a July 25 statement explaining the decision. “In light of these new revelations, Canada Soccer has made the decision to suspend…Bev Priestman for the remainder of the Paris 2024 Olympic Games, and until the completion of our recently announced independent external review.”

Priestman apologized, saying in a statement, “I am absolutely heartbroken for the players, and I would like to apologize from the bottom of my heart for the impact this situation has had on all of them.”

The team, which won gold in Tokyo, is “a group of people who care very much about sportsmanship and integrity,” she continued. “As the leader of the team on the field, I want to take accountability, and I plan to fully co-operate with the [Canadian Soccer Association] investigation.”

South Korea Mistaken for North Korea During the Opening Ceremony

As the boat carrying athletes from South Korea came into view during the July 26 Opening Ceremony, they were incorrectly announced in both French and English as being from the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea—which is North Korea.

South Korea, meanwhile, is the Republic of Korea.

In a July 27 statement, the International Olympic Committee noted, “We deeply apologize for the mistake that occurred when introducing the Korean team during the Opening Ceremony broadcast.”

IOC President Thomas Bach also called South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol to apologize, per the chief executive’s office, which relayed that Yoon told Bach the people of South Korea were “very shocked and embarrassed” by the mistake. An IOC spokesperson called the error an “operational mistake” that was “clearly deeply regrettable.”

Parade order is determined alphabetically according to the host nation’s language—minus Greece, which always goes first as the home of the first Olympics, and the host nation goes last. South Korea was the 48th country in the Parade of Nations, while North Korea was 153rd.

The Wrong Kind of Splash

British commentator Bob Ballard was pulled from Eurostar’s Olympics coverage for making a remark that was widely derided as sexist after Australian swimmers Mollie O’CallaghanShayna JackEmma McKeon and Meg Harris won gold in the 4×100-meter freestyle relay.

“Well, the women just finishing off,” Ballard said following the race. “You know what women are like…hanging around, doing their makeup.”

His co-commentator Lizzie Simmonds replied, “Outrageous, Bob. Some of the men are doing that as well.”

Calling his comment “inappropriate,” Eurostar said in a July 29 statement Ballard had been removed with “immediate effect” from further coverage.

The veteran sportscaster promptly apologized.

“The comments I made during the Australian freestyle relay victory ceremony on Saturday have caused some offence,” he wrote on X. “It was never my intention to upset or belittle anyone and, if I did, I apologise. I am a massive advocate of women’s sport.”

A Rumor That Went Off the Deep End

After speculation that a too-shallow pool inside La Defense Arena was responsible for slower-than-expected times in swimming, the athletes torpedoed the idea that the water wasn’t deep enough to smash records.

“I think it’s totally a myth,” Team USA’s Regan Smith, who swam away from Paris with five medals, told NBCOlympics.com after she and Gretchen WalshLilly King and Torri Huske set a new world record in the women’s 4×100-meter medley. “I think at first people were very aware of [the lack of new records]… So, I think that caused some chatter, like, ‘Oh, is it the pool that’s doing this?’ But I think as the meet went on, people got used to it, and then I think they got more comfortable with it, and then we started seeing some really fast swims.”

Added four-time medalist Walsh, “I think much of what the Olympics is, and what it represents, makes any pool that it’s at feel kind of slow. Because you have so much pressure on yourself that it is hard at your 100 percent best.”

Swimmer Sent Home for “Indiscipline”

Brazilian swimmer Ana Carolina Vieira was sent home after, according to the Brazilian Olympic Committee, she committed two “acts of indiscipline”: She left the Olympic Village with boyfriend/teammate Gabriel Santos without permission, the BOC said, after acting “in a disrespectful and aggressive manner” in response to a “technical decision made by the Brazilian Swimming Team committee” regarding the 4x100m freestyle relay.

In a video titled “How a communication failure destroyed my Olympic dream,” Vieira lamented what happened but said, “everything is going to be solved at the right time.”

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