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Tag: races

  • Fifth athlete disqualified from one of dirtiest races in Olympic history | Athletics

    The London 2012 race regarded as one of the dirtiest in history has expunged yet another name from the record books after Tatyana Tomashova was stripped of her women’s Olympic 1500m silver medal. The Russian becomes the fifth out of 12 finishers in the final to be disqualified for retrospective doping offences.

    The race was questioned almost immediately with Britain’s Lisa Dobriskey telling the BBC straight after the race: “I’ll probably get into trouble for saying this, but I don’t believe I’m competing on a level playing field.” History, though, has slowly proven Dobriskey correct.

    Tomashova is the latest athlete to be punished after analysis of her data held in the Moscow anti-doping laboratory showed she had been taking banned drugs. The Russian had finished fourth but was moved up after the first two in the race, Turkey’s Asli Cakir Alptekin and Gamze Bulut, were banned for blood doping and had their results annulled in 2015 and 2017 respectively. Belarus’s Natallia Kareiva, who came seventh, and Russia’s Yekaterina Kostetskaya, who was ninth, were also banned for doping offences.

    The loss of Tomashova’s medal was confirmed by the Athletics Integrity Unit, who said she had decided not to appeal against a 10-year ban imposed on her by the Court of Arbitration for Sport in September.

    “Tomashova’s sanction stemmed from AIU charges based on historical data, showing evidence of doping in Russian athletics, from the Laboratory Information Management System at the former Moscow Laboratory,” CAS said. “The International Olympic Committee may now proceed with the reallocation of medals and the update of the IOC database.”

    The Ethiopian-born Swedish athlete Abeba Aregawi, who was fifth in London, moves up to silver while the American Shannon Rowbury takes a belated bronze medal. Dobriskey and her fellow Briton Laura Weightman have been moved up to fifth and sixth respectively.

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    In 2016, Dobriskey, who won a world championship silver medal in 2009, remembered the hurt she felt after the race. “I wanted to cry and I needed to get out of the stadium,” she said. “It should have been a joyous moment in front of my home crowd but I felt humiliated. I just wanted the ground to swallow me up. I felt I had to apologise for my performance to my family and friends. I felt I’d let people down.”

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  • The 6 closest Heisman Trophy voting races in college football history

    The 6 closest Heisman Trophy voting races in college football history

    The most prestigious trophy in college football is the Heisman Trophy. Sometimes the winner dominates voting in a blowout — like Joe Burrow in 2019. But we’re here to look at the tightest Heisman finishes in history.

    2009: Mark Ingram vs. Toby Gerhart — and others (28-point margin)

    Mark Ingram Alabama Heisman 2009

    Alabama’s Mark Ingram clinched the Heisman Trophy in the closest race in the award’s history, beating Stanford running back Toby Gerhart by a razor-thin 28 points. Ingram’s pivotal performances, like a career-best 246-yard game against South Carolina, helped carry Alabama to an undefeated season and their first SEC title in a decade.

    Gerhart’s eye-popping 1,871 rushing yards and 28 touchdowns made it a fierce race, and Texas quarterback Colt McCoy (1,145 points) and Nebraska defensive star Ndamukong Suh (815 points) were also hot contenders. For added perspective, the gap between first and fourth that year was just 489 points; compare that to Joe Burrow’s 2019 record-setting margin of 1,846 points — a larger difference than Ingram’s entire winning vote total (1,304).

    1985: Bo Jackson vs. Chuck Long (45-point margin)

    Bo Jackson Auburn Heisman winner

    In a tight finish, Auburn’s Bo Jackson edged out Iowa’s Chuck Long by just 45 points, the closest margin in Heisman history until 2009. Jackson’s season was defined by resilience — he played through multiple injuries, including two broken ribs, and still rushed for 1,786 yards and 17 touchdowns. Meanwhile, Long’s passing (2,978 yards and 26 touchdowns) powered Iowa to a 10-1 record.

    1961: Ernie Davis vs. Bob Ferguson (53-point margin) 

    Ernie Davis Syracuse Heisman

    In one of the closest Heisman votes ever, Ernie Davis beat Ohio State’s Bob Ferguson by just 53 points, making history as the first Black player to win the award. Davis’s dynamic play as both a rusher and receiver helped Syracuse to a top-10 finish. He broke school records set by Jim Brown and capped off his college career with an MVP performance in the Liberty Bowl.

    Off the field, Davis’s success represented a cultural breakthrough during the Civil Rights Movement. After his win, Davis received a congratulatory handshake from President John F. Kennedy, making his Heisman win a symbol of both athletic and social progress.

    1953: John Lattner vs. Paul Giel (56-point margin)

    John Lattner Notre Dame

    In one of the tightest Heisman races in history, Notre Dame’s Johnny Lattner edged out Minnesota’s Paul Giel by just 56 points. Lattner was a true all-around player, contributing as a rusher, receiver, kick returner and defensive back. Despite not leading the Irish in any single offensive category, his versatility shined through with 651 rushing yards, nine touchdowns, and four interceptions for the 9-0-1 Notre Dame squad. 

    2001: Eric Crouch vs. Rex Grossman (62-point margin)

    Eric Crouch Nebraska Heisman

    The 2001 race ended with Nebraska’s Eric Crouch sneaking by Florida’s Rex Grossman by 62 points. Crouch’s game-changing 63-yard touchdown reception against Oklahoma helped secure his place in Heisman lore. The Nebraska star’s ability to impact the game both on the ground and in the air gave him a slight edge. The option quarterback’s 1,510 passing yards and seven touchdowns with 1,115 rushing yards and 18 more touchdowns were enough to offset Grossman’s 3,896 passing yards and 34 touchdowns.

    1989: Andre Ware vs. Anthony Thompson (70-point margin)

    Andre Ware 1989 Heisman

    In 1989, Houston’s Andre Ware made history as the first Black quarterback to win the Heisman, defeating Indiana’s Anthony Thompson in a tightly contested vote. Despite Houston’s probation, which kept Ware’s high-octane offense off TV screens, his record-breaking season couldn’t be ignored. Ware threw for 4,699 yards and 46 touchdowns, setting 26 NCAA records. His unforgettable season, including a 95-point game against SMU, solidified his legacy as one of college football’s most electrifying quarterbacks.

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  • Lebanese doctor races to save the eyes of those hurt by exploding tech devices

    Lebanese doctor races to save the eyes of those hurt by exploding tech devices

    BEIRUT — For almost a week, ophthalmologist Elias Jaradeh has worked around the clock, trying to keep up with the flood of patients whose eyes were injured when pagers and walkie-talkies exploded en masse across Lebanon.

    He has lost track of how many eye operations he has performed in multiple hospitals, surviving on two hours of sleep before starting on the next operation. He has managed to save some patients’ sight, but many will never see again.

    “There is no doubt that what happened was extremely tragic, when you see this overwhelming number of people with eye injures arriving at the same time to the hospital, most of them young men, but also children and young women,” he told The Associated Press at a Beirut hospital this past week, struggling to hold back tears.

    Lebanese hospitals and medics were inundated after thousands of hand-held devices belonging to the Hezbollah militant group detonated simultaneously on Tuesday and Wednesday last week, killing at least 39 people. Around 3,000 more were wounded, some with life-altering disabilities. Israel is widely believed to have been behind the attack, although it has neither confirmed nor denied its involvement.

    Although the explosions appear to have targeted Hezbollah fighters, many of the victims were civilians. And many of those hurt in the attack suffered injuries to their hands, face and eyes because the devices received messages just before they detonated, so they were looking at the devices as they exploded.

    Authorities have not said how many people lost their eyes.

    Veteran and hardened Lebanese eye doctors who have dealt with the aftermath of multiple wars, civil unrest and explosions, said they have never seen anything like it.

    Jaradeh, who is also a lawmaker representing south Lebanon as a reformist, said most of the patients sent to his hospital, which specializes in ophthalmology, were young people who had significant damage to one or both eyes. He said he found plastic and metal shrapnel inside some of their eyes.

    Four years ago, a powerful blast tore through Beirut’s port, killing more than 200 people and wounding more than 6,000. That explosion, caused by the detonation of hundreds of tons of ammonium nitrates that had been stored unsafely at a port warehouse, blew out windows and doors for miles around and sent cascades of glass shards pouring onto the streets, leading to horrific injuries.

    Jaradeh also treated people hurt in the port explosion, but his experience with those wounded by the exploding pagers and walkie-talkies has been so much more intense because of the sheer volume of people with eye injuries.

    “Containing the shock after the Beirut port blast was, I believe, 48 hours while we haven’t reached the period of containing the shock now,” Jaradeh said.

    Jaradeh said he found it hard to dissociate his job as a doctor from his emotions in the operating theater.

    “No matter what they taught you (in medical school) about distancing yourself, I think in a situation like this, it is very hard when you see the sheer numbers of wounded. This is linked to a war on Lebanon and war on humanity,” Jaradeh said.

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  • A secretive group recruited far-right candidates in key US House races. It could help Democrats

    A secretive group recruited far-right candidates in key US House races. It could help Democrats

    DES MOINES, Iowa — Joe Wiederien was an unlikely candidate to challenge a Republican congressman in one of the nation’s most competitive House districts.

    A fervent supporter of former President Donald Trump, Wiederien was registered as a Republican until months earlier. A debilitating stroke had left him unable to drive. He had never run for office. For a time, he couldn’t vote because of a felony conviction.

    But he arrived last month at the Iowa Capitol with well over the 1,726 petition signatures needed to qualify for the ballot as a conservative alternative to first-term Republican Rep. Zach Nunn. After filing the paperwork, he flashed a thumbs up across the room at an operative he knew only as “Johnny.”

    Several other unorthodox candidates have emerged across the country—all backed by the same shadowy group, the Patriots Run Project.

    For the past year, the group has recruited Trump supporters to run as independent candidates in key swing districts where they could siphon votes from Republicans in races that will help determine which party controls the House next year, an Associated Press review has found. In addition to two races in Iowa, the group recruited candidates in Nebraska, Montana, Virginia and Minnesota. All six recruits described themselves as retired, disabled—or both.

    The group’s operation provides few clues about its management, financing or motivation. But interviews, text messages, emails, business filings and other documents reviewed by the AP show that a significant sum has been spent—and some of it traces back to Democratic consulting firms.

    While dirty tricks are as old as American elections, the efforts this year could have profound consequences in the fight to control Congress, which is expected to be decided by a handful of races. It’s also not an isolated example: Allies of Trump have been working across the U.S. to get liberal academic Cornel West on the ballot in hopes he could play spoiler in the presidential election.

    “At that time I was thinking, well, it would be nice to be in Congress and get to work with President Trump,” Wiederien, 54, reflected in an interview outside the Veterans Affairs hospital in Des Moines, where he was seeking treatment for a leaking incision on his head from previous brain surgery. “It looks like it’s a dirty trick now.”

    Wiederien withdrew his candidacy last month after he says it became clear he’d been manipulated into running against Nunn. Now he wants an investigation to uncover the motives of those who made his candidacy possible.

    As with other recruits, his story begins with Facebook, where the Patriots Run Project operated a series of pro-Trump pages and ran ads that used apocalyptic rhetoric to attack establishment politicians in both parties while urging conservatives to run in November.

    “We need American Patriots like YOU to stand for freedom with President Trump and take back control from the globalist elites by running for office,” one such ad states.

    Some candidates say they were contacted because of their political posts on Facebook. Two others said the group reached out after they completed an online survey.

    Once recruited, they communicated with a handful of operatives through text messages, emails and phone calls. In-person contact was limited. Run Patriots Project advised them about what forms to fill out and how to file required paperwork.

    In at least three races, petition signatures to qualify for the ballot were circulated by a Nevada company that works closely with the Democratic consulting firm Sole Strategies, according to documents, including text messages and a draft contract, as well as the firm’s co-founder. In Iowa, a different Democratic firm conducted a poll testing attacks on Nunn, while presenting Wiederien as the true conservative.

    Despite the ties to Democratic firms, there is a scant paper trail to determine who is overseeing the effort.

    Patriots Run Project is not a registered business in the United States and it is not listed as a nonprofit with the IRS. It has not filed paperwork to form a political committee with the Federal Election Commission. The only concrete identifying detail listed on the group’s website is a P.O. Box inside a UPS store in Washington, D.C.

    Messages left at email addresses and phone numbers for the group’s operatives went unanswered.

    A spokesperson for the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, House Democrats’ campaign arm, said the organization had no knowledge of or involvement in the effort. House Majority PAC, the Democrats’ big spending congressional super PAC, was also not involved, a spokesman said.

    Jason Torchinsky, a prominent Republican election lawyer and former Justice Department official, said investigators should take interest. “Given what is described, there could be a wide variety of federal and state criminal violations,” he said.

    Rick Hasen, a law professor at University of California, Los Angeles, said the effort “looks shady and unethical,” but added “it is hard to say whether any laws have been broken, which would depend not only on the facts, but also the statutes and precedents under state law.”

    In Iowa, it is a crime to deprive or defraud voters of “a fair and impartially conducted election process,” while in Virginia ”conspiracy against rights of citizens” is a felony.

    It’s not the first time Patriots Run Project has drawn attention.

    In June, the Center for Strategic Dialogue, a London-based watchdog, issued a report that found the network of Patriots Run Project pages on Facebook were likely controlled by a small number of people, deceiving users and violating Facebook’s policies on “coordinated inauthentic behavior.” The ads also violated the site’s standards because they did not include disclaimers showing who was responsible.

    Facebook took down the pages. But by then, the mystery operatives running the group were already working to get recruits on ballots.

    Meta, Facebook’s parent company, didn’t respond to a request for comment. The company reported receiving $48,000 for the group’s ads.

    Unlike Wiederien, other candidates said they believed the group had done nothing wrong.

    Thomas Bowman, 71 and disabled after a kidney transplant, said he believes he likely was recruited to run against Democratic Rep. Angie Craig of Minnesota to split the conservative vote and help Craig win reelection in the suburban Minneapolis district. But the self-described constitutional conservative expressed gratitude for free help getting signatures.

    “They got me on the ballot,” Bowman said. “If I had to do that all by myself, I couldn’t do it.”

    In Montana, Dennis Hayes was recruited to run as a Libertarian against GOP Rep. Ryan Zinke. The group found a donor to give him $1,740 to cover his candidate filing fee, Hayes recalled. The donor, whom Hayes would not identify, went to Hayes’ bank with him to deposit the check, which Politico previously reported.

    “I told them I didn’t have the money to run or I would. They got me a donor so I could run for Congress,” said Hayes, 70.

    Robert Reid, a widowed retiree running against Republican Rep. Jen Kiggans in southeastern Virginia, said he was contacted by Patriots Run Project after posting his views to Facebook. His sole in-person contact was when a man drove to his home in a Mercedes SUV to drop off his completed petition signature paperwork.

    “They seem to be nice people,” said Reid, a Trump supporter who will appear on November’s ballot for the swing district seat. The thought, however, did cross his mind that “these guys want me to run to draw votes away from” Kiggans.

    In Nebraska, Army veteran and Trump supporter Gary Bera said he was asked to run as an independent against Rep. Don Bacon, a Republican who is facing a challenge. The district, which includes Omaha, is the state’s most competitive.

    Bera was a truck driver and engineering draftsman before disability forced him from work. After he was recruited through an online survey, Bera said the group instructed him to open a business checking account, a requirement for declaring a federal candidacy. Because his car wouldn’t run, an operative agreed to pick him up to file paperwork with the state.

    But plans changed abruptly last month when he was informed that the group had not collected enough signatures for him to qualify. “Now I’m putzing around,” Bera said.

    In Iowa, the group recruited longtime GOP activist Stephanie Jones to run as an independent against Republican Rep. Mariannette Miller-Meeks, even though Jones does not live in that eastern Iowa district. Jones said the group paid to gather signatures for her but fell short.

    Jones, a Trump supporter who is on disability due to post-traumatic stress disorder, then unsuccessfully sought the Libertarian Party nomination with an operative’s encouragement. She said she believes those behind the effort are genuine but desire anonymity because “they don’t want to be targets of the deep state.”

    Wiederien, however, thinks the group had ulterior motives. The Iowa district he was recruited to run in has been fiercely contested in recent years. Nunn won by roughly 2,000 votes in 2022, while the Democrat who held the seat, Cindy Axne, eked out victories in two prior races that drew third-party candidates.

    The Patriots Run Project identified Wiederien through Facebook last fall, and an operative calling himself “Knox” urged him to run: “God bless you. You’re a true patriot. We are gonna save our country!”

    Wiederien, who has a collection of Trump merchandise and attended several Trump rallies, had text and phone conversations over the ensuing months with operatives who identified themselves as “Will Haywood” and “Johnny Shearer.”

    The AP was unable to confirm whether Haywood and Shearer were real identities. A John Shearer who Wiederien said was involved said he could not confirm or deny that. “If I were in this covert political organization I wouldn’t really admit to it, would I?” he said.

    The operatives convinced Wiederien to change his party affiliation from Republican to unaffiliated so he could qualify. They assured him his 2013 felony conviction for his third operating while intoxicated offense, which cost him his right to vote and run for office until 2016, wasn’t disqualifying.

    They urged him to list his affiliation on the ballot as “America First.” They arranged for a firm to gather signatures across the district, which includes Des Moines, its suburbs and rural southern Iowa.

    Those signatures were gathered by Common Sense America, a Nevada limited liability company created in February. A company disclosure filing in Colorado, which requires signature gatherers to register, lists a phone number for a co-founder of the Democratic consulting firm, Sole Strategies.

    “We work very closely with Common Sense America,” Zee Cohen-Sanchez, the co-founder, said when contacted. Lisa Cohen, the registered agent for Common Sense America who appears to be Cohen-Sanchez’s mother, didn’t return messages.

    Sole Strategies has earned nearly $1.8 million over the past four years working primarily for Democratic candidates and causes, including numerous Democratic House members and candidates, records show. Jones said Common Sense America gathered signatures for her campaign.

    A draft contract shows the firm was set to receive $3,300 for collecting signatures for Bera in Nebraska. A philanthropist listed on the document as the proposed buyer of those services is Carolyn Cohen of Nyack, New York, a registered Democrat who has a history of supporting liberal causes. “She doesn’t comment on her political donations,” her partner, Larry Miller, said.

    Last month, a poll attacked Nunn as soft in his opposition to abortion, terrorists and Democrats — calling him “an errand boy for the uniparty elite”— while painting Wiederien as the pro-Trump conservative in the race.

    A spokeswoman for the firm that operated the poll, Dynata, said that its customer was Patinkin Research, which says it “has worked to elect dozens of Democratic candidates.” The spokeswoman later said she identified Patinkin in error and urged AP not to publish its identity. Patinkin’s founder didn’t return messages.

    When it was time to submit his petitions, Wiederien said “Johnny” agreed to drive him the 75 miles to Des Moines and arrived in an electric car. The car needed to be charged before they could make the trek, so Wiederien said he entertained the operative with video clips of Trump while they waited.

    Later, he said they met a man wearing a suit in an office near the Iowa Capitol who gave them paperwork and a binder full of his signatures. All Wiederien had to do was sign a form.

    Wiederien’s statement of candidacy was notarized by a Des Moines paralegal whose firm has done some campaign-related work for Democrats. Firm representatives didn’t return messages.

    Wiederien said he found it suspicious “Johnny” appeared to avoid a Capitol surveillance camera and declined to have his picture taken with him. Afterward, the group paid for an Uber to drive Wiederien home.

    Soon, he heard from Republicans who convinced him he’d been tricked into thinking the Patriots Run Project had Trump’s support and withdrew his name from the ballot.

    ___

    Slodysko reported from Washington.

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