caseyedwards
Well-Known Member
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The ISU doesn’t want citizens of Russia competing. I don’t see why they would allow these blatant ban evasions
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Best guess? A ceasefire. Or maybe when the IOC and other international feds start moving in the direction of letting Russian & Belarusian athletes compete again?It's all very easy to say that Russian and Belarusian skaters will be back "as soon as the war is over," but what does that mean? A ceasefire? A peace treaty? The payment of reparations?
Would there have to be something akin to twentieth-century denazification? After World War II, the ISU resumed holding its Championships in 1947, but Germany didn't send any competitors until 1951. (Italy started sending them in 1949.)
The question of whether Russia should be banned for state-sponsored doping and related issues is yet another issue, and it may lead an even longer ban on Russian participation in all Olympic sports, including figure skating, at the international level.
We shall see what happens..
But some of those Russians have legitimate ties to other countries - Diana Davis is, after all, also an American. Same with Annabelle Morozov, who is not only American but also French, and her new partner, Naryzhnyy, was born in Ukraine. And then there's Jonathan Guerreiro who was born in and lived in Australia until he was a teenager and, of course, his partner, Tiffany, isn't even Russian by birth, but rather British, and she also represented France earlier in her career.The ISU doesn’t want citizens of Russia competing. I don’t see why they would allow these blatant ban evasions
6. Are Davis and Anabelle Morozov going to get new partners and/or join new federations?
7. Has Smolkin been able to establish U.S. residency that would count toward the five-year requirement for citizenship?
Mine has waited for his citizenship for four years and it took all kinds of threats to get it.My husband is applying for US citizenship right now, he’s been on a green card 3.5 years and is married to a US citizen. Just the process can take more than a year with a straightforward case. Anyone without a green card now isn’t going to make 2026.
It's a pretty safe bet anyone with a last name like Danielyan or Petrosyan has at least one Armenian grandparent.We don't know what sort of ies the likes of Danielian, Petrosian, or Aliev have with the Armenian or Azerbaijani sides of their families - they could visit relatives in those countries frequently for all we know. Same goes for skaters with Jewish or Georgian ancestry.
Our friends - she’s American, he’s Swedish - took almost that long, for someone with no political implications at all who’s been working here for many years. The Trumpies did slow the process to a standstill and it’s taking a while to get back to normal, which wasn’t great to start with.Mine has waited for his citizenship for four years and it took all kinds of threats to get it.
I'm a little surprised that Poland and Great Britain weren't part of this group...In russia they love to have specific lists of those who are "against them", their "biggest enemies", etc. Hence I wasn't surprised to see this "list of countries that initiated cancellation of Rostelecom Cup".
Source, not sure how much it can be trusted.
USA, Canada, France, Italy, Slovakia, Czech Republic, Spain, Switzerland, Austria, Norway, Finland, Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia, THANK YOU.
Both of Artur's parents are Armenian and he speaks the language at home with them. He would obviously be a good candidate to switch, but his family is not wealthy. The Armenian federation has no money and the skaters have to fund 100% of their training themselves. Anastasia Galustyan said she could only afford it because her dad was her coach and she didn't have to pay him.It's a pretty safe bet anyone with a last name like Danielyan or Petrosyan has at least one Armenian grandparent.
Germany wasn't on the list either.
I'm interested in seeing the abstentions. When RUS is back, they will remember, and they will act.
But people aren’t talking only of Russians with legit ties to other counties. They are taking about people with none like trusova or scherbakovaBut some of those Russians have legitimate ties to other countries - Diana Davis is, after all, also an American. Same with Annabelle Morozov, who is not only American but also French, and her new partner, Naryzhnyy, was born in Ukraine. And then there's Jonathan Guerreiro who was born in and lived in Australia until he was a teenager and, of course, his partner, Tiffany, isn't even Russian by birth, but rather British, and she also represented France earlier in her career.
We don't know what sort of ties the likes of Danielian, Petrosian, or Aliev have with the Armenian or Azerbaijani sides of their families - they could visit relatives in those countries frequently for all we know. Same goes for skaters with Jewish or Georgian ancestry.
Did it make more sense for these skaters to compete for Russia, which had much more robust funding and skating infrastructure? Sure, same as it makes more sense for most US and Canadian skaters to represent their own countries until they're not getting international assignments, etc. If the ISU applied the same "sit out one year from your last competition" rule to these skaters who wished to change countries now, I wouldn't have a problem with it. That would effectively prevent all of those skaters from being selected for the GP.
At best, we might see some former Russians at Euros (if they weren't on the Russian Olympic team last year) or possibly Worlds.
I fervently hope that's how it works out.I think the biggest change is going to be in the women's discipline. For too many years, we've been conditioned to accept tiny jumps with questionable technique as okay and I'm not sure the rest of the feds are going to want to go back to that. The longer the Russian women are missing from competition, the more jarring and obvious those jump deficiencies will be when they do return.
Right, these measures are necessary precisely because of figure skating's entanglement with the state propaganda machine and individual skaters' feelings and opinions don't matter; they're used as props in a political spectacle that's much bigger than them.I don’t understand at all how people can say that athletes are so afraid for their lives that they can’t say anything, so they can’t be punished and banned from competitions. This is contrary to logic. If a country can intimidate its athletes, then this is direct evidence of state interference in sports. What else in such a country are people afraid to talk about? What honest results of athletes can we talk about?
I think this situation goes beyond medication. He had already placed Russian military in Eastern Ukraine, and annexed Crimea. The port of Odessa and Moldova are on his radar. Look at a map. Russia would control natural gas (Donbas) and the sea in that area.Isn't Putin on steroids for his thyroid problem? That would surely render him immunocompromised. Furthermore, steroids can cause personality disorders. My mother-in-law was on high steroid dosages for her heart condition, and she announced that she and her family no longer needed doctors or medicine, because SHE was DOCTOR CURE. "Delusions of grandeur" it is called.
My husband is applying for US citizenship right now, he’s been on a green card 3.5 years and is married to a US citizen. Just the process can take more than a year with a straightforward case. Anyone without a green card now isn’t going to make 2026.
It's classified as a sport by the IOC.I follow chess, which is another competitive activity (some might even say sport, though I find that funny)
No wonder that several countries have been omitted...what is or what is not and how it is published in Russian media is done with an ultimate goal to shape/brainwash public opinion; to make that opinion ready to support whatever Putin's does.In yesterday's release, the ISU specified:
"... over 20 ISU Members who urged the ISU Council to also decide that the ISU Members of Russia and Belarus will not be permitted to attend the 2022 ISU Congress or other official meetings and seminars etc., and that candidates from Russia and Belarus will not be permitted to stand for election at the 2022 ISU Congress for any position"
The list given in the Russian article only includes 14 countries, so several have been omitted.
...in my opinion it is his deeply rooted inferiority complex which he feeds by his actionsPersonally I think he is evil and power hungry. I dont give the benefit or excuse of medications. I wonder if as a kid he killed puppies, cats and other creatures for fun.
In russia they love to have specific lists of those who are "against them", their "biggest enemies", etc. Hence I wasn't surprised to see this "list of countries that initiated cancellation of Rostelecom Cup".
Source, not sure how much it can be trusted.
USA, Canada, France, Italy, Slovakia, Czech Republic, Spain, Switzerland, Austria, Norway, Finland, Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia, THANK YOU.