8 Olympic badminton players tossed for trying to lose
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LONDON (AP) - Eight female badminton doubles players were disqualified Wednesday from the London Olympics after trying to lose matches to receive a more favorable place in the tournament.
The Badminton World Federation announced its ruling after investigating two teams from South Korea and one each from China and Indonesia. It punished them for "not using one's best efforts to win a match" and "conducting oneself in a manner that is clearly abusive or detrimental to the sport" in matches Tuesday night.
"We applaud the federation for having taken swift and decisive action," IOC spokesman Mark Adams told The Associated Press. "Such behavior is incompatible with the Olympic values."
Erick Thohir, the head of Indonesia's Olympic team, told the AP that the Indonesian team will appeal. The BWF said South Korea had also appealed.
The competition was to continue later Wednesday. It was unclear if four eliminated teams would be placed into the quarterfinals or if the competition would restart at the semifinal stage.
Thohir accused Chinese players of losing on purpose in the past.
"China has been doing this so many times and they never get sanctioned by the BWF," Thohir said. "On the first game yesterday when China did it, the BWF didn't do anything. If the BWF do something on the first game and they say you are disqualified, it is a warning for everyone."
IOC Vice President Craig Reedie, the former head of the international badminton federation, welcomed the decision.
"Sport is competitive," Reedie told the AP. "If you lose the competitive element, then the whole thing becomes a nonsense.
"You cannot allow a player to abuse the tournament like that, and not take firm action. So good on them."
The eight disqualified players are world doubles champions Wang Xiaoli and Yu Yang of China and their South Korean opponents Jung Kyun-eun and Kim Ha-na, along with South Korea's Ha Jung-eun and Kim Min-jung and Indonesia's Meiliana Jauhari and Greysia Polii.
The players went before a disciplinary hearing Wednesday, a day after spectators at the arena booed their performance after it became clear they were deliberately trying to lose.
International Olympic Committee President Jacques Rogge had been at the venue but had left shortly before the drama unfolded. The IOC said it would allow badminton's ruling body to handle the matter.
Paul Deighton, chief executive officer of the London organizers, said there would be no refunds for the evening's badminton program. Chairman Sebastian Coe called what happened "depressing," adding "who wants to sit through something like that?"
Teams blamed the introduction of a round-robin stage rather than a straight knockout tournament as the main cause of the problem. The round-robin format can allow results to be manipulated to earn an easier matchup in the knockout round.
The Chinese players tried to rig the draw after its second-seeded pair unexpectedly lost to a Danish team in the morning. That placed the No. 2 pair on course for a semifinal meeting with Wang and Yu, instead of the final.
Wang and Yu then deliberately set out to lose so they would go into the bottom half of the draw. They hardly exerted themselves, and neither did the South Koreans, drawing jeers of derision from the crowd and warnings from the umpire and tournament referee Torsten Berg. Wang and Yu eventually got what they wanted by losing.
An hour later, the South Korean team of Ha and Kim took to the court and decided to also try to lose to the Indonesians to avoid meeting Wang and Yu in the quarterfinals. Early on, all four players were warned by the umpire for not trying hard, and Berg returned and produced black cards to disqualify both pairs, but the cards were rescinded on a promise of better play.
In the third game, Berg reappeared to urge them to finish, and the Indonesians ended up being better at losing than Ha and Kim, who fell into the playoff they didn't want with the world champions.
One of the world's top male players, 2004 Olympic singles champion Taufik Hidayat of Indonesia, called the situation a "circus match."
China's Lin Dan, the Olympic men's champion in singles, said through an interpreter the sport is going to be damaged.
"Especially for the audience," he said before the disqualifications were announced. "This is definitely not within the Olympic spirit. But like I said before, it's not one-sided. Whoever sets the rule should make it knockout so whoever doesn't try will just leave the Olympics."
Beijing badminton silver medalist Gail Emms said the matches were embarrassing to watch.
"It was absolutely shocking," she said. "The crowds were booing and chanting 'Off, off, off.'"
The Badminton World Federation announced its ruling after investigating two teams from South Korea and one each from China and Indonesia. It punished them for "not using one's best efforts to win a match" and "conducting oneself in a manner that is clearly abusive or detrimental to the sport" in matches Tuesday night.
"We applaud the federation for having taken swift and decisive action," IOC spokesman Mark Adams told The Associated Press. "Such behavior is incompatible with the Olympic values."
Erick Thohir, the head of Indonesia's Olympic team, told the AP that the Indonesian team will appeal. The BWF said South Korea had also appealed.
The competition was to continue later Wednesday. It was unclear if four eliminated teams would be placed into the quarterfinals or if the competition would restart at the semifinal stage.
Thohir accused Chinese players of losing on purpose in the past.
"China has been doing this so many times and they never get sanctioned by the BWF," Thohir said. "On the first game yesterday when China did it, the BWF didn't do anything. If the BWF do something on the first game and they say you are disqualified, it is a warning for everyone."
IOC Vice President Craig Reedie, the former head of the international badminton federation, welcomed the decision.
"Sport is competitive," Reedie told the AP. "If you lose the competitive element, then the whole thing becomes a nonsense.
"You cannot allow a player to abuse the tournament like that, and not take firm action. So good on them."
The eight disqualified players are world doubles champions Wang Xiaoli and Yu Yang of China and their South Korean opponents Jung Kyun-eun and Kim Ha-na, along with South Korea's Ha Jung-eun and Kim Min-jung and Indonesia's Meiliana Jauhari and Greysia Polii.
The players went before a disciplinary hearing Wednesday, a day after spectators at the arena booed their performance after it became clear they were deliberately trying to lose.
International Olympic Committee President Jacques Rogge had been at the venue but had left shortly before the drama unfolded. The IOC said it would allow badminton's ruling body to handle the matter.
Paul Deighton, chief executive officer of the London organizers, said there would be no refunds for the evening's badminton program. Chairman Sebastian Coe called what happened "depressing," adding "who wants to sit through something like that?"
Teams blamed the introduction of a round-robin stage rather than a straight knockout tournament as the main cause of the problem. The round-robin format can allow results to be manipulated to earn an easier matchup in the knockout round.
The Chinese players tried to rig the draw after its second-seeded pair unexpectedly lost to a Danish team in the morning. That placed the No. 2 pair on course for a semifinal meeting with Wang and Yu, instead of the final.
Wang and Yu then deliberately set out to lose so they would go into the bottom half of the draw. They hardly exerted themselves, and neither did the South Koreans, drawing jeers of derision from the crowd and warnings from the umpire and tournament referee Torsten Berg. Wang and Yu eventually got what they wanted by losing.
An hour later, the South Korean team of Ha and Kim took to the court and decided to also try to lose to the Indonesians to avoid meeting Wang and Yu in the quarterfinals. Early on, all four players were warned by the umpire for not trying hard, and Berg returned and produced black cards to disqualify both pairs, but the cards were rescinded on a promise of better play.
In the third game, Berg reappeared to urge them to finish, and the Indonesians ended up being better at losing than Ha and Kim, who fell into the playoff they didn't want with the world champions.
One of the world's top male players, 2004 Olympic singles champion Taufik Hidayat of Indonesia, called the situation a "circus match."
China's Lin Dan, the Olympic men's champion in singles, said through an interpreter the sport is going to be damaged.
"Especially for the audience," he said before the disqualifications were announced. "This is definitely not within the Olympic spirit. But like I said before, it's not one-sided. Whoever sets the rule should make it knockout so whoever doesn't try will just leave the Olympics."
Beijing badminton silver medalist Gail Emms said the matches were embarrassing to watch.
"It was absolutely shocking," she said. "The crowds were booing and chanting 'Off, off, off.'"
It is time to ask why this sorry "sport" is even in the Olympics and fastpitch and baseball are not? What a joke!
 @whoareyou Badminton is fast paced all action.  Baseball is the most boring spectator sport known to man that only couch potatoes and the brain dead can watch.  That is why.
 @cyclops Highest paid baseball player...Alex Rodriguez who will make $30,000,000 dollars in 2012 (not to mention endorsements). The highest paid badmitton player will recieve $15,000 and a medal they can pawn!...Enough said!
 @cyclops Badmitten was the sport that the nerds who couldn't make the baseball team played! The fact that one can make 30 miillion playing baseball and needs someone to sponsor them to play badmitten is enough to show how silly this "sport" is!
 @whoareyou The fact that Mr. Rodriguez gets paid that much money to stand around and scratch his sac is not only a crime but also very sad for the poor schmucks who pay him.  Any top badminton player could run circles around him all day long.  A shuttlecock can travel at 200 mph and is considered one of the fastest sports in the world. Obviously way to fast for you to comprehend sitting on your couch with your hand in a bag of Cheetos watching bunch of overpaid "athletes???" spit and scratch themselves. Â
 @FreeCoffeeNow! Baseball will never go back to the Olympics. The MLB clubs won't allow it. The fact is though, it is the most international sport behind soccer there is. Fastpitch should be in there though. It is a shame that a sport that has become so important to so many girls is cut out. Come on though badmitten, ping pong, syncronized swimming, dancing horses, kayaking, sycronized diving? Who watches that anywhere?
 @whoareyou To your first idea, that baseball should be in the Olympics; the plain fact is that we'd reduce it from being baseball being played between two teams that are out to prove something to one another to a field where experience and raw cash would start wanting to all-of-a-sudden like, start the tv born idiocy of a three hour game played by superstar strategists that have nothing to do with the supposed nine man game of baseball. Think about it.
Olympic team sports are supposed to reflect small unit trials specific to some regionally historic function like bobsledding. Can it be a race? Sure. But the damn coach, trainers, General Managers or whoever-they stay at the damn top where they belong. Out Of Contact.
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Cheating in badminton, what is the world coming too? I guess this is one way to bring some attention to that sport. At least it's a sport that's scored independantly and not by a group of judges.
 @Cinn It will be scored at the ticket window next year.
Figures, it's ok when China does it numerous times in the past, but as soon as others do, they're disqualified.Â
 @Heisenberg You'll find that the same systemic bs is allowed to China all across the world, but no one is supposed to notice it all. You can blame Tim Berners-Lee that I did. Or Al Gore.
 @heisenberg:Â
You do realize that two of the four pairs were from China, right?
It's disgraceful and the IOC did the right thing. HAHA! You got ejected from the Olympics. Now go home with your head low in shame.Â
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And hopefully the IOC will figure out a way to avoid this from happening in the future.
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As we know from the Romney tax return issue, what is technically legal is still considered cheating by most.Â
For trying to lose? Now why can't we do this with the Mariner bullpen? ;)
 @Zoso The problem ain't the bullpen, we can't hit to save our lives. When the bullpen takes the mound with a one run lead, the loss isn't on the pitching staff.
 @Howard Beale Yeah that too! Altho if there's one person on the bullpeb that should get that credit, it's Brandon League. His performance on Sunday speaks for itself. Saw it right from the 7th row overlooking 3rd base.
Does anyone really think that the players themselves thought up this charade on their own? What about the coaches?
Maybe I'm stupid here but how does losing on purpose get you a more favorable spot?
@BlueJedi Same purpose as professional sports drafts
 @BlueJedi Read the story.
 @oledawg I did. What I don't understand is how does losing a match help you advance closer to a medal match?
 @Larry*X*K Yeah, I see how much coverage this silly "sport" got prior to this cheating scandal. Winning these joke sports is the only way the Chinese can stay ahead in the medal count. They don't compete very well in basketball, soccer, run, jump, or throw. They spend all their time on diving, gymnastics, badmitten and ping pong (BTW...I am not taking anything away from gymnastics). Even in the sports they can do they still cheat!
 @bluejedi:Â
Yes.
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I'm sorry others took shots at you for simply asking a question.
 @BlueJedi Sorry, you're certainly not stupid, didn't mean to imply. It's just different
 @Larry*X*K you do realize I'm trying to ask a legit question, don't you? BTW, I hate football so I have no idea how the game is played. I am a causal MLB fan so I only know the general idea of how the game works. I know how basketball is played but no idea how playoffs are done. I am an avid badminton player but have no idea how the olympics do their "playoffs" so to speak. I know how local tournaments are done but no idea how international tournaments are done. Does that make me stupid? No.
 @oledawg so it's a case of trying to match up to weaker players for the certain win??
 @BlueJedi A typical American only understand NFL and MLB and basketball playoff format but nothing about international tournaments
 @BlueJedi It's seeding strategy as they explained.  Instead of matching up against a certain team in the semi's they try to get in the other half of the bracket so they would face them in the finals.  It happens a lot in tournaments with bracket seeding like hockey or wrestling.
 @BlueJedi Obviously you are not a die hard badminton devotee (like me lol)...
Pathetic - they should find a way to say if a country gets tagged for conduct like this they can and will be banned forever from the Olympics either do your best or your entire country will be banned!
 @freespeech:Â
I don't know about a "banned forevere" rule, but perhaps their ENTIRE Olympic delegation, all sports, getting kicked out for that particular Olympics?
lets just start giving everyone a medal.
 @Clayton Bigsby but make sure you have kool treats...
 @Clayton Bigsby Or not keep score so nobody feels bad...
Good for the committee. Â What an insult to all those who sweat blood and sacrifice everything just to make it to the Olympics. Â Tanking should never be tolerated.Â
Im just surprised we didnt have 13 yr old Chinese gymnasts this year
 @SODOSonicsNow Instead we have a 16 year old girl who somehow shaved 5 seconds off her time and can now miraculously swim faster than Ryan Lochte!