Calgary Herald

Rio judges under fire for dubious decisions

- ED WILLES ewilles@theprovinc­e.com connect to your city at

The announceme­nt was made and Ireland’s Michael John Conlan raised his middle finger to the ringside judges at the Olympic boxing venue, indicating he disagreed with their decision.

Afterwards, Conlan said: “My dream has been shattered. I’ve been robbed.”

It sounded like the final word on the subject. It’s far from that.

The Irish fighter was simply the latest member of the boxing community to register his disgust over the scoring in Rio as the judging appears to be heading toward another Olympic scandal. A week prior to Rio, The Guardian newspaper ran a lengthy piece under the headline: “Olympic boxing tournament hit by corruption allegation,” which alleged crooked officials have been manipulati­ng results in competitio­ns run by AIBA, boxing’s governing body.

Let’s just say the results haven’t put those allegation­s to rest.

On Tuesday, Conlan, the bronze medallist from London, sounded off about the unanimous decision awarded to Russia’s Vladimir Nikitin in their 56-kilogram bout, saying, among other things: “I’ll not do another Olympics. I would advise anybody not to compete for AIBA … You see the decisions and you think boxing is dead.”

But his is hardly a voice in the wilderness in Rio.

On Monday night, the crowd at Centro roundly booed Russia’s Evgeny Tishchenko, who was awarded the gold medal over Kazakhstan’s Vassiliy Levit in a unanimous decision. According to sources, several countries are contemplat­ing a course of action in Rio that would include a public statement about the judging. But The Guardian article predicted this controvers­y two weeks ago, alleging AIBA-appointed judges have been fixing fights and that a cabal of seven five-star officials are at the centre.

The article alleged those officials meet before competitio­ns to decide who will win certain bouts. Sources told The Guardian in some competitio­ns the winners of half the fights have been predetermi­ned.

It’s also been reported Azerbaijan loaned AIBA $10 million to underwrite its profession­al boxing league, called APB (AIBA Profession­al Boxing). Canada’s Arthur Biyarslano­v lost to an APB fighter, Germany’s Artem Harutyunya­n.

“AIBA paid a lot for that series,” Canadian coach Daniel Trepanier said.

APB was launched in 2014 and sent some 20 fighters to Rio. According to an internal memo seen by The Guardian, AIBA called on its executive committee to, “properly understand what are Azerbaijan’s expectatio­ns as to the repayment of the loan or what other benefits are expected if the loan can’t be repaid.”

Except they know what Azerbaijan’s expectatio­ns are, just as they know about the benefits.

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