Even the Norwegians are tired of skiing without Russia. Champions on the brink of despair! - Sportish
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Even the Norwegians are tired of skiing without Russia. Champions on the brink of despair!

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A popular sport is rapidly turning into a local pastime.

The first stage of the Ski World Cup of the 2023/24 season starts in a few days. There is no widespread excitement around this event; it is already easy to guess which country will dominate the ski track. And this predictability is reflected in interest in competitions. Without Russia, skiing is gradually dying.

Now this fact is recognized even in Norway.

“It sucks”

On November 24, the Cross-Country World Cup starts in Ruka, Finland. There are no Russian stages in the 2023/24 season, as well as the participation of our athletes themselves. The absence of Russians in different sports is tolerated differently: in some places the organizers, rivals and fans do not notice the loss, but in others, as in bandy, the world championships have to be cancelled. Ski racing has not yet reached the extreme, but the level of competition and interest in competitions is falling at a gigantic speed.

— There were no Russian skiers at the pre-season competitions in Finland, as happened constantly in past years. This is kind of crazy. This sucks! No Bolshunov, Nepryaeva, Terentyev… These guys are fun to watch. We have lost that zest in ski racing, there is no longer that special group of guys who don’t speak English, look reserved, unfriendly and fill that niche in the journalists’ stories. The fact that they are not with us sucks,” American journalist Nathaniel Hertz shared his emotions on the FasterSkier podcast.

Neutral fans of cross-country skiing are unlikely to like what is happening. Russian skiers not only “filled a niche in the stories,” they created real competition for the Norwegians, who, without us, actually turned the World Cup stages into the championship of their country, especially when it comes to men’s competitions. Maybe the Scandinavians themselves like this state of affairs? It turns out that in Norway they are starting to miss the Russians.

“They will suffer as a product”

“They have been practically our only competitors in recent years, so it is clear that competition and ski racing as a product will suffer. Let’s hope they can come back,” said four-time world champion Emil Iversen in a conversation with Nettavisen.

The Norwegian champion is not in vain worried about the competition. Its decline is already directly reflected in interest in cross-country skiing. A report by the International Ski and Snowboard Federation (FIS) on television broadcasts last season noted a drop in total audiences of 242 million viewers, or 26%. It is clear that this incredible decline is largely due to the absence of Russian television viewers, who showed the highest interest in skiing competitions. But in some other countries important for FIS, such as Sweden or Finland, a decrease in ratings is recorded. And this despite the fact that the total broadcast time increased by 53% in the previous season!

Norwegian athletes (right and center) / Photo: © SOPA Images / Contributor / LightRocket / Gettyimages.ru

By the way, interest in broadcasts of men’s cross-country skiing fell by a catastrophic 39%. So, in general, it’s understandable why Iversen is worried. Other star Norwegian athletes also acknowledge the problems.

“It’s fantastic that we have so many good skiers, but the interest in cross-country skiing at the international level may not be very high,” NRK quoted four-time Olympic champion Therese Johaug at the end of last season.

Why they are not worried about the fate of cross-country skiing in the FIS is a mystery. Of course, in some form, international cross-country skiing competitions will be held in any case – the fate of bandy is unlikely to threaten them. But with current trends, skiing risks turning from a popular winter sport into something more parochial with the corresponding audience, sponsorship and prize money.

Source: Sportbox

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The ex-head of the TsSP and SBR was sentenced to 7 years in prison in an embezzlement case

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The former director of the Sports Training Center for Russian National Teams (TSSP) and the president of the Russian Biathlon Union (SBR), Alexander Kravtsov, was sentenced to seven years in prison in an embezzlement case, but he will appeal the verdict, said lawyer Vadim Myasnikov.

Kravtsov was arrested in September 2020. According to investigators, in the period from May 2014 to July 2017, he hired several people for different positions at the Center for Social Security, but the employees, while receiving wages, did not actually work. The amount of damage from Kravtsov’s actions is estimated at 14.45 million rubles. The prosecutor’s office requested 10 years in prison and a fine for Kravtsov. The verdict was announced on Thursday in the Zamoskvoretsky District Court of Moscow.

— Kravtsov was found guilty and sentenced to imprisonment for seven years in a general regime colony, five of which he had already served. The accomplices received suspended sentences ranging from 2.5 to 4 years. We will file a short appeal within the prescribed time frame. After preparing the full text of the verdict, we will file a full appeal, we have 10 days to do this.

— Are there still chances to change Kravtsov’s sentence?

– We are absolutely sure of this. The event of the crime itself is missing, and even the action that the prosecutor’s office considers proven is incorrectly classified,” Match TV quoted Myasnikov as saying.

Kravtsov headed the TsSP from 2009 to 2020, and was president of the SBR from 2014 to 2018.

Source: Sportbox

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CAS plans to publish the decision in the Valieva case by February 12, 2024

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The Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) plans to publish a decision in the case of Russian figure skater Kamila Valieva by February 12, 2024, according to the website of the International Skating Union (ISU).

Hearings on the doping case of 17-year-old Valieva ended at CAS in mid-November. It was previously reported that the court intends to render a verdict at the end of January 2024.

“CAS plans to publish a decision regarding the proceedings involving the ISU, the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA), the Russian Anti-Doping Agency (RUSADA) and Valieva no later than February 12, 2024,” the statement said.

Valieva at the 2022 Olympic Games in Beijing helped the Russian team win gold in the team competition. Before the personal tournament, it became known that the banned drug trimetazidine was found in the doping test of the figure skater from the Russian Championship. CAS admitted the Russian to the individual competitions of the Games, where she took fourth place. The award ceremony for the Olympic medalists of the team tournament has not yet taken place.

    Source: Sportbox

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    “Arbitrariness and lawlessness.” The President of the ROC reacted harshly to the IOC decision on Russian athletes

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    The President of the Russian Olympic Committee (ROC) Stanislav Pozdnyakov called the decision of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) to approve the change of citizenship of three Russian athletes lawless and arbitrary.

    On Wednesday, the IOC approved the change of sports citizenship of Greco-Roman wrestler Georgiy Tibilov, cyclist Valeria Lyubimova and cyclist Mikhail Yakovlev without the approval of the ROC and without the standard three-year quarantine.

    “It is impossible to call such actions and the decisions that precede them other than arbitrariness and lawlessness. After blatant violations of the Olympic Charter, the rights of athletes and human rights, and discrimination on the basis of nationality took place on the outer perimeter without any consequences for the IOC, it is clear that some colleagues from Lausanne are not going to stop at the “successes achieved.”

    Yesterday we witnessed another chapter of the farce – a disconcerting abuse of power with the appropriation of the power to apply “special rules” and at its own discretion to resolve issues related to the direct and exclusive jurisdiction of the National Olympic Committee. In this case, the question concerns the change of sports citizenship. Now – OCD, who will be next?!

    The Executive Committee of the Russian Olympic Committee did not give consent to the transfer of natives of Russia mentioned in the IOC statement to the jurisdiction of other NOCs. We consider it unacceptable to indulge arbitrariness and selectivity in the interpretation of the Olympic Charter. Just think about it! An individual sports organization has been brought to the point where it arrogates to itself the right, going beyond its own jurisdiction, to impose sanctions against sovereign states. At the same time, without having any formal status, or even individual characteristics of a subject of the system of international relations.

    The goals and objectives of those same elements are unchanged – to cause maximum damage to Russian sports – professional, personnel, financial, reputational. Moreover, it was precisely through the hands of functionaries of the once leading international organizations in the industry.

    Meanwhile, forced or voluntarily obedient performers are already going to great lengths to somehow reinforce and justify their actions, with which they continue to destroy true Olympism, turning the sport entrusted to them into a weapon of political blackmail and corporate enrichment.

    Just as in the case of the temporary suspension of the ROC under a far-fetched pretext with another mockery of the Olympic Charter, we will demand legally reasoned explanations and defend our rights in accordance with established procedures,” Pozdnyakov wrote in the Telegram channel.

    The IOC suspended the membership of the ROC in October due to the inclusion of the Olympic Councils of the DPR, LPR, Kherson and Zaporozhye regions into the ROC. It was reported that the IOC reserves the right to decide on the admission of individual Russian athletes to the 2024 Olympics in Paris and the 2026 Winter Games in Milan and Cortina d’Ampezzo in a neutral status.

    Source: Sportbox

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