First Medal for the Neutral Athletes at Paris Olympics

Viyaleta Bardzilouskaya
Sumber :
  • AP Photo/Charlie Riedel

Paris, VIVA – Ivan Litvinovich and Viyaleta Bardzilouskaya of Belarus won the first medals by neutral athletes at the Paris Olympics on Friday, each doing so on trampoline.

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The 23-year-old Litvinovich defended the gold he won in Tokyo three years ago with a fairly comfortable victory in the men’s final, hours after Bardzilouskaya earned silver in the women’s competition.

Litvinovich’s final-round score of 63.090 was over a point ahead of silver medalist Wang Zisai and bronze medalist Yan Langyu, who are from China, as quoted from AP site.

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Bardzilouskaya and Litvinovich are two of 17 Belarusians competing as a neutral athlete. Russia and Belarus are barred from team sports at the Paris Games because of the war in Ukraine.

Viyaleta Bardzilouskaya

Photo :
  • AP Photo/Charlie Riedel

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Litvinovich was embraced by the crowd as he accepted his gold medal on the podium. At one point, he lifted it off of his teal sweat suit to show it to various corners of a packed Bercy Arena.

He stood dutifully, if a little bored, while the IOC-commissioned anthem for AIN athletes played. Several times, he peeked around the rest of the arena after the green-and-white flag with AIN was raised rather than the red-and-green banner of his native country.

“At the next Games, I would like to compete with my flag and with my national anthem and I’d like to represent my country in the best possible way,” Litvinovich said.

Neither Litvinovich nor Bardzilouskaya wanted to talk about the war. Litvinovich called a question relating to the war a “provocation” and declined to answer.

While Bardzilouskaya’s triumph was somewhat unexpected, Litvinovich, is a two-time world champion and has been among the best in the world.

Three years after winning in a near-silent arena in Tokyo because the COVID-19 pandemic closed the Games to spectators, Litvinovich acknowledged he was a little nervous in a decidedly different — not to mention louder — setting, particularly following France’s Pierre Gouzou.

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