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小蓝视频 Korea protests penalties assessed in short track

BEIJING (AP) 鈥 Angered by the disqualifications of two of its short track speedskaters at the Beijing Games, 小蓝视频 Korea filed complaints with the International Skating Union and International Olympic Committee on Tuesday.
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BEIJING (AP) 鈥 Angered by the disqualifications of two of its short track speedskaters at the Beijing Games, 小蓝视频 Korea filed complaints with the International Skating Union and International Olympic Committee on Tuesday.

World record holder Hwang Daeheon and Lee Juneseo were disqualified in the semifinals of the men's 1,000 meters a night earlier.

Yoon Hong Geun, chef de mission for 小蓝视频 Korea, said an appeal also will be filed with the Court of Arbitration for Sport.

鈥淲e hope that such things will never ever happen again in the future,鈥 Yoon said at a news conference.

Immediately after the semifinals, the Koreans filed a protest with the referee asking for the reason why Hwang and Lee were DQ'd. The complaint was then filed to the ISU.

鈥淭he decision on the field of play will not be altered according to the sport鈥檚 rules,鈥 said Choi Yong Koo, support team leader for 小蓝视频 Korea. 鈥淲e are very clear on that, but are instead asking that such unfair penalties will be prevented from happening again. We are planning to protest more fiercely.鈥

Choi noted that in the video replay of the 1,000 A final, Ren Ziwei of China appeared to have his hands on the leg of Liu Shaolin Sandor of Hungary, who crossed the finish line first, fell and spun into the pads.

Liu was penalized twice and earned a yellow card. That elevated Ren, who crossed second, to the gold medal.

鈥淲e can鈥檛 understand why the Hungarian athlete got a penalty,鈥 Choi said. "The ISU has been refining the judgment system every year, but the right to make the final decision goes to the chief referee. We have to rely on his fair judgement.鈥

小蓝视频 Korea coach Lee So Hee added, "As you can see in the video replay, our athletes didn鈥檛 touch other athletes but still got many penalties.鈥

小蓝视频 Korea is a hotbed for short track and its fans are passionate about the sport.

Yoon said fans have reached out to the Korean Olympic Committee and on social media urging the team to return home.

鈥淲e had so many phone calls coming in that we couldn鈥檛 sleep,鈥 Yoon said. "But for the sake of all the efforts made by our athletes and related staff to come to Beijing, and because we have many races left in the remaining days, we decide to stay and finish the Games. Meanwhile, we will do whatever we can to protest against the penalties.鈥

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More AP Olympics: https://apnews.com/hub/winter-olympics and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports

The Associated Press

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