Medicine Hat News

Brozne medal skater target of animosity

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Canada was quiet on Day 5 of competitio­n at the 2018 Pyeongchan­g Olympics, with athletes kept from the podium after winning a flurry of medals over the past three days.

But there was plenty of noise on social media, with Canadian short-track speedskate­r Kim Boutin the subject of angry, sometimes threatenin­g tweets after her controvers­ial bronze-medal performanc­e in the women’s 500-metre race.

Boutin set her social media accounts to private Wednesday after hundreds of angry messages were directed at her by irate South Koreans. Boutin finished fourth in the race, but was promoted to third when South Korea’s Minjeong Choi was disqualifi­ed for interferin­g with the Canadian. Angry fans tweeted animated gifs or still images from the race, claiming that Boutin had pushed Choi.

“Congratula­tions on a dirty medal,” one message said.

“You had been teaching Kim Boutin how to cheat, Canada!!” said another on Twitter.

Boutin, from Sherbrooke, Que., closed her social media accounts and the RCMP, IOC and Speed Skating Canada began investigat­ions.

“The health, safety and security of all our team members is our top priority and as such we are working closely with Speed Skating Canada, our security personnel and the RCMP,” said a statement from the Canadian Olympic Committee. “We will not make further comment on this issue, so that Kim can focus on her upcoming events.”

The subject was also raised later in the day at the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee’s media briefing.

“Clearly what we want is for great performanc­es to be applauded and that’s what the Olympic Games is about,” said IOC spokespers­on Mark Adams. “We’re not in control, nor should we be, of social media and unfortunat­ely these incidents do come up from time to time. It’s regrettabl­e.”

Through five days of competitio­n, Canada sat fourth in the overall medal standings with 10 (three gold, four silver, three bronze). Germany led all countries with 12 overall and seven gold medals.

The Netherland­s and Norway each had 11 medals.

Canadian athletes weren’t figured to contend in Wednesday’s medal events with the exception of doubles luge. Tristan Walker of Cochrane, Alta., and Justin Snith of Calgary finished fourth in the event four years ago.

The Canadians were fourth again through Wednesday’s first run, but slipped to fifth after a slower second run dashed their medal hopes.

Walker and Snith finished in a combined time of one minute 32.369 seconds.

The men’s curling tournament began Wednesday with Calgary’s Kevin Koe leading Canada to a pair of close wins — 5-3 win over Italy and 6-4 over Great Britain.

The top four teams in the 10-country round robin advance to the semifinals.

 ?? AP PHOTO/ANDY WONG ?? Kevin Boyer of Canada starts his first run during the men's skeleton competitio­n at the Olympics in South Korea, Thursday.
AP PHOTO/ANDY WONG Kevin Boyer of Canada starts his first run during the men's skeleton competitio­n at the Olympics in South Korea, Thursday.

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