2024 Olympics: Jordan Chiles’ Coach Claps Back at Cheating Claims
Jordan Chiles’ team is backing her up.
After the Olympic gymnast was awarded a bronze medal for her floor final following a difficulty score inquiry submitted by her team—which ultimately bumped Romania’s Ana Barbosu from the podium—Jordan’s coach Cecile Canqueteau-Landi is setting the record straight.
The Team USA gymnastics coach quickly took to the mat after a user commented on one of her posts implying the judges cheated so Jordan could win.
“I shouldn’t have to explain but I will ONCE,” Cecile replied on her August 6 Instagram post. “Jordan’s highest possible [start value] on floor id a 5.9—At quals and team finals she received a 5.8 and we didn’t question it because we saw that not all the elements were completed.”
But as Cecile previously told reporters following the floor final, during Jordan’s performance, Cecile and the team felt the 23-year-old performed a tour jeté with a full turn—something she hadn’t done as well during qualifiers and in the team round—which is why they submitted the inquiry. (Inquiries are not allowed for execution scores but can be submitted for difficulty scoring.)
As she further explained in the comment, “Being placed 5th with nothing to lose, I sent the inquiry so I wouldn’t regret not asking. I didn’t think it would be accepted and at my surprise it was.”
Cecile—who is an Olympian herself and competed in the 1996 Games in Atlanta—made it clear, however, she was just doing her job as a coach and that everything that happened was above board.
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“Jordan won this medal and didn’t steal anything from anyone,” the 44-year-old continued. “Do I feel bad for the Romanian athlete? Of course I do! It was so sad and heartbreaking to see but it is the sport!”
As Cecile concluded, “You don’t have to like it but you do have to respect the outcome and more importantly respect Jordan and not drag her down because you disagree. She EARNED that bronze medal.”
The coach’s explanation comes amid ongoing controversy surrounding the series of events. On August 5, the Romanian Olympic Committee submitted an appeal of gymnast Sabrina Maneca-Voinea’s final score in the floor event, per a social media post. (While Sabrina and Ana both earned overall scores of 13.700 during the final, Ana was placed above Sabrina due to a higher execution score.)
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Sabrina had originally been given a deduction of 0.1 for stepping out of bounds, but replays seemingly showed her remaining in.
President of the Romanian Olympic Committee Mihai Covaliu therefore urged the International Gymnastics Federation—the official body behind the gymnastics competitions—to reassess Sabrina’s score, explaining an initial challenge had been rejected. There has been no word on whether Sabrina’s score will be reevaluated at this time.
Meanwhile, Mihai wrote in an August 6 Facebook post, “The way in which the score was assessed and the refusal to present the full reasons/proofs for the rejection of the appeal submitted within the time limit set by the rules seriously harms the image of international gymnastics, but in particular affects the athlete, even jeopardizing their mental health.”
For more controversial moments from this year’s Olympic Games in Paris, keep reading.
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