Track, medal rows flare at Games
All three top finishers in the men’s 800-meter final were disqualified and an aggrieved Indian boxer turned down her bronze medal as disputes flared at the Asian Games yesterday.
North Korea stunned world champion Japan 3-1 to win the women’s football final, avenging its tight loss in the title match four years ago.
Indian women’s boxing icon Mary Kom was a big winner as she won a split decision in a tight flyweight final to claim her first Asian Games gold, buoying her hopes for the 2016 Olympics.
Qatar’s Femi Ogunode completed a sprint double when he won the 200 meters in a Games record 20.14 seconds, to add to his new Asian mark of 9.93 seconds in the 100.
But controversy broke out in the men’s 800 when Abdulaziz Mohammed, Musaab Bala and Abraham Kipchirchir Rotich, who finished one, two and three, were all disqualified.
Team officials protested after Saudi Mohammed was disqualified for obstruction and Qatar’s Bala and Rotich of Bahrain were penalized for breaking lane regulations. Adnan Taess Akkar Almntfage, 34, who crossed the line fourth, stepped onto the podium all smiles to collect Iraq’s first gold of the Games.
The drama came just days after Bahrain’s Ruth Jebet was stripped of her steeplechase win as she was about to step onto the victory podium, only to be reinstated the next day.
India rejoiced as Kom finally got an Asian Games gold. But the spotlight fell on Indian teammate Laishram Sarita Devi, who flatly rejected her lightweight bronze in an angry protest against judging standards.
Devi, who was controversially judged beaten by South Korea’s Park Ji-na in the semifinals, walked to the podium in tears and refused to accept her bronze medal from officials.
She then walked over to Park and, as the South Korean fighter bowed in greeting, she placed the bronze medal around her neck.
“I said, ‘This is for you and all Korea, because you only deserve a bronze’,” Devi said later. “It was a protest for all the sportsmen and women of the world against injustice in sport. There should be fair play in sport.”
“If she wanted to refuse the medal she should have not come to the ceremony,” said a spokesman for the Incheon Asian Games Organizing committee, who added that the snubbed officials had been “offended”.
Syria’s karate fighter Nour-Aldin al-Kurdi, 19, meanwhile, became the fifth athlete snared in the doping net when he tested positive for clenbuterol.
Shi Tingmao won the women’s 1m springboard and He Chao took out the men’s equivalent as China progressed to six diving medals, four away from a perfect 10.
Rhythmic gymnast Son Yeon-jae failed to inspire South Korea to team gold but South Korea’s women edged China 1-0 to take the field hockey gold. China reached 130 golds overall, ahead of 62 for South Korea.
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