<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
0202160386
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
020216
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Saturday, February 16, 2002
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
NWS
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1A
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo TIMOTHY A. CLARY/Agence France-Presse
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

Why are David Pelletier and Jamie Sale smiling at their latest news
conference? Because their silver was upgraded to gold.

Canaian fans in Salt Lake City cheer when they learned that their country's
figure skating pairs team had received a gold medal.

Jim Thorpe
</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM FREE PRESS COLUMNIST
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
SALT LAKE 2002 WINTER OLYMPICS.   SIDEBAR ATTACHED.
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 2002, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
CANADA'S SWEETHEARTS GET GOLD
RUSSIANS KEEP THEIRS, BUT SCANDAL COVERS ALL THEIR MEDALS WITH MUD
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
SALT LAKE CITY -- Get your scandal scorecard. Here we go.

The silver medalists are now gold medalists. The gold medalists remain gold
medalists. The French judge did something wrong, but no one is saying what.
The Russians are not accused of anything, but everyone suspects them of
something. The International Skating Union, which didn't even plan to meet
about this mess until Monday, did a 180 on Friday and made a hypocrite of
itself. And Jacques Rogge, the head of the Olympics, insists "there is no
embarrassment" on the very day the Olympics have been embarrassed beyond
belief.

You got that? Good. Let's eat.

Golden mud. That's what this is. A dirty deal that is supposed to wipe clean
with a shiny mineral. Tell me something. If one piece of gold can make up for
cheating judges, lying executives, weeping athletes, cynical journalists and a
worldwide audience of booing fans -- well, can they sell me one? My problems
are nothing compared to that.

"What have the last few days been like?" someone asked Canadian pairs skaters
David Pelletier and Jamie Sale, who on Friday were belatedly awarded a shared
gold medal after a French judge admitted outside influence and was suspended.

"Well, we didn't come to the Olympics to have this happen," Sale said. "We are
tired, exhausted. People are constantly wanting to ask us about it but we
didn't know what to say.

"That night we told ourselves we won the silver but we had a gold-medal
performance"

"But now that misconduct has been admitted," someone asked, "do you feel as if
you were cheated out of that one Olympic moment on the victory stand?"

Sale looked straight ahead. She didn't flinch.

"You bet," she said. "Big time."

Golden mud.



Questions remain

Show me one party that isn't soiled by this mess. There is mud over what
should have been a glorious moment for Sale and Pelletier. There is mud all
over the tyrannical International Skating Union, which earlier this week acted
as if the mere suggestion of prejudiced judging was dog poop unworthy of its
noses.

Now, on Friday, here was Ottavio Cinquanta, its president (who may have his
own talk show when this is over), admitting to a packed news conference, "We
do believe that pressure was put on the judge which resulted in a condition
not to award the gold in an adequate manner."

Translation: Something stinks.

There is mud all over the French judge in question, Marie-Reine Le Gougne, who
said she was pressured by her federation to vote for the Russian couple, Elena
Berezhnaya and Anton Sikharulidze. Le Gougne, a 40-year-old former skater, has
been described, in the past few days, as "honest," "emotionally fragile,"
"guilty," "suspended" and, again and again, "pressured."

What we haven't heard is "why"? Or "for what"? Or, most importantly, "by
whom"?

Which leaves mud all over the French skating federation, which has been
implicated by Le Gougne.

Did someone in that group pressure her to vote a certain way? Was a deal made
with the Russians? Was it one of those "you boost our skater, we'll boost
yours"? If so, when does the second shoe drop? Nothing is solved here until
those questions are answered.

And what about the original winners, Berezhn- -- oh, you know, Elena and
Anton. There is mud all over the gold medals they get to keep. Their Olympic
victory was hardly the one you dream about -- coolly received, barely
applauded, medals questioned almost immediately upon presentation. What did
they do wrong? They were not in on a fix. They tried their hardest. At least
four of the eight judges -- not counting the Frenchwoman -- found them the
winners.

"We had a gold-medal performance," Pelletier said, "and I now own a gold
medal. But that doesn't take anything away from Elena and Anton. They had a
great skate and their own gold-medal performance."

But few in this part of the world see it that way. The Russians for the moment
are all but reviled. Their Olympic moment has been devalued and cheapened by
the misbehavior of the judges and the executives.

Mud on them. Mud on everything.



Check the weather

And yes, mud on the Olympics. It is all well and good that under Rogge this
scandal was addressed within a few days. Had Juan Antonio Samaranch still been
in charge of the International Olympic Committee, he'd just now be reading
about it with his sterling silver tea service breakfast.

But the fact is, it still happened. How can any sport that is judged ever be
fully believed again? How can you make athletes vow at the opening ceremonies
not to engage in doping or cheating -- while your judges are trading
influences like playing cards?

We have long suspected impropriety in figure skating -- and frankly, any sport
that allows judges wide leeway for artistic interpretation is asking for
scandal -- but still, to have a judge confess to outside pressure is
unthinkable. What that means is an individual judge's prejudice may not be the
worst of it.

They make athletes urinate in cups.

Can we make the judges turn in their phone records?

"I don't think this has damaged the Olympic movement," Rogge said. "The
athletes are very happy, the public is warm and supportive, the weather is
superb and this is now a closed matter."

Is this guy for real? The weather is superb? Oh, well then, forget it. Let's
just drop the whole thing and go snowboarding.

Look. Let's be smarter than Rogge. This is an Olympic-sized black eye, but it
doesn't need to be worse. I know some people think the Russians should be
stripped of their gold and forced to take the silver they more than likely
earned.

But in the end, that would only deepen the wound. The Russians in Moscow
already are screaming about "pressure by the North American press and the
fanatically loyal fans." And while sticking it down their throats might make
some armchair athletes feel like winners, it would only make relations between
athletes at the Olympic Village more tense. We don't need that. We don't need
a Cold War over this. Trust me, this is hardly the first unfair judging in
figure skating history, or even the biggest robbery. Only the biggest one to
get caught.

"Can we get back to the Olympics now?" Pelletier asked. "We should enjoy the
games. Go watch some hockey."

Good idea. By the way, to top this whole thing all off, we learn that thanks
to this time-consuming, multi-day scandal, NBC's Olympic ratings are sky high
and advertisers stand to make a bundle.

Wait a minute.

You don't suppose that they were behind all this.

Contact MITCH ALBOM at 313-223-4581 or  albom@freepress.com. Catch "Albom in
the Afternoon" 3-6 p.m. weekdays on WJR-AM (760). Also catch "Monday Sports
Albom" 7-8 p.m. Mondays on WJR.


(SIDEBAR)
UPON FURTHER REVIEW . . .

The decision to upgrade Canadians pairs skaters Jamie Sale and David Pelletier
to gold medals isn't the first time for a belated Olympic decision:

American Jim Thorpe was stripped of the decathlon and pentathlon gold medals
he won at Stockholm in 1912 after it was discovered he had played minor league
baseball for pay. Thorpe died in 1953, but the International Olympic Committee
reversed its decision in 1982 and awarded the medals to his children.

Norway's Thorleif Haug was presented the bronze medal in large hill ski
jumping at Chamonix in 1924, but an error in the computation of scores was
discovered 50 years later. Haug was demoted to fourth, and his daughter
presented the medal to American Anders Haugen.

Swedish boxer Ingemar Johansson was disqualified "for not giving his best" at
Helsinki in 1952 and denied his silver medal. The IOC changed its mind and
gave Johansson -- who won the professional heavyweight championship in 1959 --
his medal in 1981.

Germans Marika Kilius and Hans-Jurgen Baumler returned their pairs silver
medals in 1966 after it was alleged they had signed a pro contract before the
1964 Innsbruck Olympics. They were exonerated and got their medals back in
'87.

American featherweight Albert Robinson was disqualified for butting in the
gold medal match against Mexico's Antonio Roldan at Mexico City in 1968 and
was denied the silver medal because of the disqualification. U.S. officials
protested, and Robinson got his medal upon his return to the States.

France's Michelle Chardonnet was headed to the podium for a bronze medal at
Los Angeles in 1984 when she was told a photo finish had shown she had not
finished third in the 100-meter hurdles. First, the jury of appeal called it a
dead heat but later gave the bronze to American Kim Turner. The IAAF reversed
the decision three months later and gave the medal to Chardonnet.

Canadian synchronized swimmer Sylvie Frechette was denied a solo gold medal at
Barcelona in 1992 after a judge entered a wrong score but was not allowed to
change it, and a Canadian protest was denied. In 1993, FINA awarded Frechette
a gold medal and also allowed American Kristen Babb-Sprague to keep her gold.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>
THIS ELECTRONIC VERSION MAY DIFFER SLIGHTLY FROM THE PRINTED ARTICLE.
</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
COLUMN
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
