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Canadian Olympic figure skaters get July 22 court date for medals appeal in Valieva case | CBC Sports

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Canadian Olympic figure skaters get July 22 court date for medals appeal in Valieva case | CBC Sports

The final appeal hearing to decide medals from the 2022 Beijing Olympics doping case of Russian figure skater Kamila Valieva will be heard days before the Paris Olympics open.

A hearing on July 22 for eight Canadian skaters seeking to get team event bronze medals will be held in the Swiss city Lausanne, the Court of Arbitration for Sport said Friday.

The Summer Games formally open four days later and the International Olympic Committee aims to finally present medals in Paris for the figure skating team event from Beijing before the closing ceremony on Aug. 11. That will be 2 1/2 years after Valieva helped Russia skate to team gold, ahead of the United States, Japan and fourth-placed Canada.

Medals were never presented in Beijing because a positive test by the then-15-year-old Valieva from a sample given six weeks earlier in Russia was alerted in the global anti-doping system only after the Olympic competition was completed.

Valieva was eventually disqualified from the Olympics, and banned from the sport for four years, by a different CAS panel of judges in January. The judges did not accept her lawyers’ claim she was contaminated by a banned heart medication that got into a strawberry dessert prepared by her grandfather.

WATCH | Kirsten Moore-Towers on Canada not being awarded 2022 bronze medal: 

Figure skater Kirsten Moore-Towers reacts to Canada not being awarded bronze medal in 2022 Olympic team event

After the ISU ruled to disqualify Russian skater Kamila Valieva from the Beijing 2022 team event results for doping, but not upgrade Team Canada to bronze, we spoke to former Canadian national team member Kirsten Moore-Towers on the ruling

That CAS verdict meant the U.S. team was upgraded to the gold-medal position and Japan to silver.

However, when the International Skating Union stripped points earned by Valieva from the Russian team’s total, the method of not adding points to skaters who finished behind her left Canada still in fourth place.

Russian female figure skater Kamila Valieva poses with her right knee touching the ice, her left knee extended and arms extended to each side while competing at the Russian Grand Prix of Figure Skating in Moscow on Nov. 26, 2023.
Russian figure skater Kamila Valieva was given a four-year ban by the Court of Arbitration for Sport this past January following an appeal by WADA. (Natalia Kolesnikova/AFP via Getty Images/File)

Three Russian appeals to CAS against the ISU’s amended result, from the Russian athletes, their national skating federation and the Russian Olympic body seeking to be restored to gold, were heard on June 12. Those verdicts have not been published.

The Canadian appeal to get the bronze medals is the last to be heard.

The IOC executive board has the final decision on reallocating Olympic medals when results are affected by doping cases. Athletes whose result is later upgraded are consulted about getting their medals at an appropriate future ceremony, such as at a world championships or future Olympics.

In Paris, medalists will be celebrated at a Champions Park venue at the Trocadero, close to the Eiffel Tower.

WATCH | Skate Canada’s Mike Slipchuk wants clarity on 2022 Olympic medal decision:

Skate Canada to ‘fight for what is right’ in Olympic medal controversy

Skate Canada’s high performance director Mike Slipchuk says they are considering all options, as they prepare to appeal the International Skating Union’s awarding of medals, which kept Canada in fourth place in the 2022 Olympic team event, following the disqualification of Russia’s Kamila Valieva in a doping case.

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