Daily Sabah (Turkey)

COVID-19, Valieva doping scandal in spotlight as Beijing Games close

Overshadow­ed by a diplomatic boycott and the COVID-19 pandemic prior to opening, the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics come to a close following a 16-day winter sports extravagan­za that saw the emergence of China as a major winter sports power

- EDITOR SUDIB SONTORAN

BEIJING, the first city to host both summer and winter Olympics, handed down the Olympic flag to Milan-Cortina yesterday as a controvers­ial and eventful Games comes to an end.

The nearly monthlong event will be best remembered for the extremes of its anti-COVID-19 measures and outrage over the doping scandal that enveloped 15-year-old Russian skating sensation Kamila Valieva.

The Olympics were stalked by politics, with several countries staging a diplomatic boycott over China’s human rights record and the Russia-Ukraine tension.

BEIJING, the first city to host both summer and winter Olympics, handed down the Olympic flag to Milan-Cortina yesterday as a controvers­ial and eventful Games came to an end.

The nearly monthlong event will be best remembered for the extremes of its anti-COVID-19 measures and outrage over the doping scandal that enveloped 15-year-old Russian skating sensation Kamila Valieva.

The Olympics were stalked by politics, with several countries staging a diplomatic boycott over China’s human rights record, and the specter of invasion of Ukraine by Russia, with President Vladimir Putin attending the opening ceremony in a show of solidarity against the West with President Xi Jinping.

Still, China was spared any embarrassi­ng protests by competitor­s over its treatment of the Uyghur Muslim minority or anything else, and the thousands of foreign journalist­s on hand were stuck inside the closed-loop, unable to report more widely.

The tightly sealed bubble prevented the spread of the novel coronaviru­s at the Olympics or into the community, vindicatin­g a zero-COVID policy that has isolated China inside what are nearly closed borders.

However, many athletes had their Olympic dreams dashed by positive tests that prevented them from competing, and dozens saw their preparatio­ns disrupted by enforced isolation. Team officials and athletes demanded improved conditions including better food, internet, training equipment and more space.

On the snow, 18-year-old San Francisco-born freestyle skier Eileen Gu won two golds and a silver for hosts China, delivering on the hype generated by her dozens of endorsemen­t deals and making her the youthful face of the Games even as her success raised questions about nationalit­y and privilege.

Gu’s performanc­e is a boon for the developmen­t of snow sports in China. Xi, who will attend Sunday night’s closing ceremony at the Bird’s Nest stadium, hopes that hosting the Games will get 300 million people involved in winter sports.

China’s nine gold medals exceeded expectatio­ns, putting it in third place, while winter sports powerhouse Norway, with a population of just 5.5 million, won a record 16.

While Xi delivered a spectacle for a Chinese public that was unable to attend – tickets were not sold and many connected with the Olympics through the unexpected mania for panda mascot Bing Dwen Dwen – millions of Americans tuned out, with TV viewership reported to be far lower than during the 2018 Pyeongchan­g Games.

DOPING SCANDAL

The biggest legacy of the Beijing Olympics will be the controvers­y surroundin­g Valieva, who stumbled under pressure in her final skate, and the outrage directed towards Russian sports officials and the country’s history of doping, which meant its athletes could not compete under Russia’s flag.

Valieva failed a doping test at her national championsh­ips in December but the result was only revealed on Feb. 8, a day after she had helped the Russian Olympic Committee (ROC) win the team event.

She was nonetheles­s allowed to participat­e in the singles but finished fourth, her error-strewn performanc­e prompting a harsh reaction from her coach Eteri Tutberidze that Internatio­nal Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach later said he found “chilling.”

The saga, which dominated the Games, reopened debates over the suitabilit­y of the Olympic environmen­t for minors and prompted the world’s top anti-doping authority to investigat­e Valieva’s entourage.

The Beijing Games were the second Olympics of the COVID-19 era and also the second in just six months, after the Tokyo Summer Games were delayed by a year.

Before Milan-Cortina stage the Winter Games in 2026, Paris hosts the 2024 Summer Games, with Tony Estanguet, president of Paris 2024, promising an Olympic “light at the end of the tunnel.”

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 ?? ?? The Olympic flame burning in the center of the snowflake-shaped cauldron is on display near the National Stadium at the 2022 Winter Olympics, Beijing, China, Feb. 17, 2022.
The Olympic flame burning in the center of the snowflake-shaped cauldron is on display near the National Stadium at the 2022 Winter Olympics, Beijing, China, Feb. 17, 2022.

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