The News Tribune

‘IT WAS LIKE A MIRAGE’

Fencing rattled by suspension­s and accusation­s ahead of Olympics

- BY JERÉ LONGMAN

Fencing is a niche but fundamenta­l sport in the Olympics, contested at every Summer Games since 1896. Yet despite its genteel reputation and simple objective – touch an opponent with your blade before being touched – the sport has long been rife with drama and suspicion.

Two months before the Paris Olympics, internatio­nal saber fencing is engulfed by questions about the integrity of refereeing, accusation­s of preferenti­al treatment, and concerns among top athletes and coaches that their sport’s tangled connection­s may be helping decide who gets to compete at the Games.

The federation that governs fencing in the United States, USA Fencing, recently suspended two internatio­nal referees after they acknowledg­ed communicat­ing with each other during an Olympic qualifying tournament in California. It grew so concerned about two other referees that it asked the sport’s global governing body to ensure that those two judges were no longer assigned to any matches involving Americans.

And just last week, more than a half-dozen elite fencers demanded harsher punishment­s and urgent action to protect a sport that they say is “vulnerable to unfair refereeing and match-fixing.”

“Part of me feels so foolish for thinking all this time” that the sport was built on honor, integrity and dedication, said Andrew Mackiewicz, 28, a U.S. saber fencer who competed at the Tokyo Olympics in 2021.

“It wasn’t,” he added. “It was like a mirage.” He said he stepped away from the sport in February because of his concerns about unscrupulo­us refereeing.

JUDGMENT CALLS

While fencing relies on electronic scoring, it is referees who parse the complicate­d rules of attack during each match and decide if a point, or touch, is valid. Those rules bring an element of subjectivi­ty to the scoring, and saber fencing, one of the sport’s three discipline­s along with épée and foil, can be particular­ly challengin­g because its athletes lunge explosivel­y at one another and deliver touches nearly simultaneo­usly.

Subjectivi­ty “creates a lot of room for corruption,” which can be difficult to prove, said Yury Gelman, a longtime fencing coach at St. John’s University in New York who will coach his seventh Olympics at the Paris Games. In an interview, Gelman expressed frustratio­n that little was being done to address saber fencing’s problems.

The referees who were suspended last month by USA Fencing, Jacobo Morales and Brandon Romo, have been barred from judging matches in tournament­s overseen by the federation for nine months. They denied any manipulati­on of the match. An investigat­ion into their conduct began after they appeared to have communicat­ed during a match in January involving a top U.S. saber fencer, Tatiana Nazlymov, 19, at an Olympic qualifying tournament.

USA Fencing had initially sought 10-year bans for both men but ultimately decided on lesser punishment­s after a disciplina­ry panel report, reviewed by The New York Times, found “the appearance of impropriet­y” but no credible evidence to support collusion or other manipulati­on.

They were not the only referees, though, who had drawn the attention of the U.S. federation. Months earlier, Phil Andrews, the CEO of USA Fencing, had written with alarm to the sport’s global governing body, the Internatio­nal Fencing Federation, to express concern that there was “likely to be improper officiatin­g” of bouts involving Nazlymov and another leading U.S. saber fencer, Mitchell Saron.

In its letter, which was sent Dec. 3 and reviewed by the Times, USA Fencing said it was primarily concerned with two referees, Vasil Milenchev of Bulgaria and Yevgeniy Dyaokokin of Kazakhstan. Video evidence, the letter said, indicated that calls made by those referees in bouts involving Saron and Nazlymov showed “a likely favoritism” toward them.

As a result, USA Fencing requested that Milenchev and Dyaokokin no longer be assigned to bouts involving any U.S. fencers. Andrews said he understood that the Internatio­nal Fencing Federation responded to the letter with an investigat­ion but was unaware of its outcome.

The internatio­nal federation did not respond to requests for comment, but both referees continue to judge matches involving U.S. fencers. Attempts to reach Milenchev and Dyaokokin through the internatio­nal federation were unsuccessf­ul.

In a second letter written by USA Fencing that was sent to Nazlymov and Saron on Dec. 18 and also reviewed by the Times, Andrews told the athletes that the federation was aware that “potential preferenti­al officiatin­g treatment” was benefiting their performanc­es in internatio­nal competitio­ns, and warned them that they could be stripped of some points they had accumulate­d toward Olympic qualificat­ion if “strong evidence” of match manipulati­on emerged.

Nazlymov and Saron have since been named to the U.S. team for the Paris Olympics. And by March, USA Fencing’s concerns seemed to have eased. Saron acknowledg­ed through a spokespers­on that on March 6 he had received a text message, which was reviewed by the Times, from a federation official saying that he was not a cause for concern.

Andrews said in an interview that there was no evidence that either fencer knew of or knowingly took advantage of improper refereeing. And preliminar­y results from an independen­t investigat­ion into match manipulati­on in saber fencing found “no evidence that individual U.S. fencers were actively involved in manipulati­ng their own bouts,” the federation said in late April.

Nazlymov did not respond to a request for comment. But her mother, Zheng Wang, wrote in an email that “Tatiana is absolutely innocent and the cheating/matchfixin­g accusation is ridiculous.”

A WEB OF CONNECTION­S

The latest flashpoint came in early January, when Nazlymov was involved in the match at the North American Cup in San Jose, California.

According to a USA Fencing disciplina­ry panel, with the score tied at 12-12, Romo began to seek input from Morales before awarding points to either fencer, and Morales acknowledg­ed responding via hand gestures. Such communicat­ion is a violation of fencing’s rules.

Howard Jacobs, a California lawyer who represente­d Morales, the more experience­d referee, said his client was simply affirming calls that the lessexperi­enced Romo planned to make, and that no decisions were changed because of their communicat­ions. According to the report, Romo said he was seeking only confirmati­on of his intended calls.

A video posted online that showed Morales signaling also showed Nazlymov’s coach sitting near and talking to Morales at some point during the match. Neither referee disputed the video, USA Fencing said.

According to testimony at a hearing, the coach, Fikrat Valiyev, asked Morales who Romo was and another question unrelated to the bout, but the two did not discuss any calls, Jacobs said. Nazlymov narrowly won the match, 15-14.

Andrews said that there was “no evidence that Tatiana herself is at fault” in the refereeing dispute.

Nazlymov is a member of one of fencing’s most prominent families. Her grandfathe­r, Vladimir Nazlymov, won three Olympic gold medals in the team saber competitio­n for the former Soviet Union, and her father, Vitali Nazlymov, is a former NCAA individual champion.

Her coach, Valiyev, is a two-time Olympic saber fencer from Azerbaijan, but he also exemplifie­s the complicate­d relationsh­ips that exist in elite fencing. In addition to serving as Tatiana Nazlymov’s primary coach, he works at the Nazlymov family fencing academy in Maryland and as an internatio­nal referee at the Olympic level.

Wang said in an email that her daughter had been unfairly accused in what she described as a “doctored” video posted in January by Andrew Fischl, a U.S. coach and former elite saber fencer.

Fischl, who regularly posts fencing videos, said he obtained two pieces of raw video from the January match and zoomed in on the bout but did not change the order of any action, distort any occurrence or make any accusation­s. “I just showed what happened and was like, this is weird and inappropri­ate,” Fischl said.

Valiyev has not been accused of any impropriet­y and said in an email that he had never tried to manipulate matches. But he has come under scrutiny in other videos posted online for possible conflicts of interest by coaching and refereeing at the same competitio­n, and by refereeing matches involving Uzbek fencers while Vladimir Nazlymov was coaching Uzbekistan’s national team or individual Uzbek athletes.

Valiyev, responding by email with Vitali Nazlymov, said that he behaved according to the rules. But the two coaches acknowledg­ed that “fencing is a small world and conflicts exist everywhere.”

Eli Dershwitz, 28, the 2023 world saber champion from the United States, said that while irregulari­ties occurred in fencing “all the time,” he believed in the integrity of the sport and his Olympic teammates.

“If I thought there was something blatantly wrong going on, I would say something,” Dershwitz said.

 ?? LO PING FAI USA TODAY NETWORK ?? Leung Chin Yu, left, of China’s Hong Kong competes against Macchi Tilippo of Italy during the men’s senior foil team final at the 2024 FIE Foil World Cup in Hong Kong on May 4, 2024.
LO PING FAI USA TODAY NETWORK Leung Chin Yu, left, of China’s Hong Kong competes against Macchi Tilippo of Italy during the men’s senior foil team final at the 2024 FIE Foil World Cup in Hong Kong on May 4, 2024.
 ?? LO PING FAI USA TODAY NETWORK ?? Volpi Alice of Italy celebrates during the women’s senior foil team final against France at the 2024 FIE Foil World Cup on May 4, 2024.
LO PING FAI USA TODAY NETWORK Volpi Alice of Italy celebrates during the women’s senior foil team final against France at the 2024 FIE Foil World Cup on May 4, 2024.

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