Thailand’s Olympic committee said it would be more careful about endorsing athletes yesterday after former child prodigy violinist Vanessa Mae was banned from competitive skiing over her rigged entry into the Sochi Winter Olympics.
The 36-year-old music star became Thailand’s first-ever female Olympic skier when she competed at the Sochi Games in Russia this year, coming 67th and last in the giant slalom.
Mae, born in Singapore to Thai and Chinese parents, was on Tuesday given a four-year ban from all International Skiing Federation (FIS) events over her “manipulated” qualification for the Games.
Photo: EPA
The federation said that a hearing panel had established that Mae’s qualifying event, held in a blizzard in January in Slovenia, was riddled with irregularities.
A senior member of the National Olympic Committee of Thailand (NOCT), who did not want to be named, told reporters that Mae and the kingdom would “have to accept and comply with the ban.”
“This could serve as a lesson for the NOCT to be more careful in its endorsements,” said the official of the body, which puts forward names to participate in the Games for the kingdom.
“We endorsed her as our representative because we wanted to participate in the Winter Games, not because we wanted to win,” the official added.
British-based Mae, who has sold millions of albums and competed under her father’s name, Vanakorn, was given 21 days to appeal the decision.
The federation said the “manipulated” races on Jan. 18 and 19 resulted in points calculations “that do not reflect the true performance of the competitors that participated ... and in particular the points awarded to Vanessa Vanakorn.”
Two giant slalom races in the Krvavec resort on Jan. 19 were recorded as involving a competitor who was not present, while someone else who fell over was placed second after having 10 seconds taken off her time, the FIS said.
In addition, weather conditions were so bad that no regular race could be held and “any comparable competition in Slovenia would have been canceled,” according to the competition referee.
Other problems included at least one competitor who started away from the starting gate “outside the automatic timing wand that was manually opened by the starter when she was already on the course,” the federation said in a statement.
A previously retired competitor with the best FIS points in the competition took part for the sole purpose of lowering the penalty for the other participants and the race courses were not changed for the second runs as stipulated by the federation.
The governing body also banned Slovenia’s Borut Hrobat, in charge of the race, for two years, while FIS technical delegate Fabio de Cassan of Italy, Slovenia’s race timer Matiaz Goltez, referee Vlado Makuc and starter Uros Sinkovec were all banned for a year.
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