Current:Home > MyUkrainian gymnast wins silver at world championships. Olympic spot is up in the air -Clarity Finance Guides
Ukrainian gymnast wins silver at world championships. Olympic spot is up in the air
Poinbank Exchange View
Date:2025-04-07 02:43:49
ANTWERP, Belgium — Ukrainian gymnast Illia Kovtun has no say on whether Russian athletes will be allowed to be at next year’s Paris Olympics. Or, if they are, whether his country will let him and his fellow athletes compete.
All he can do is his job. And hope it will help convince Ukrainian officials that he and the rest of the Ukrainian team should go to the Paris Games no matter what. That their presence alone will be an act of defiance.
Kovtun won the silver in the men’s all-around at the world gymnastics championships Thursday night. It’s his second time on the podium in three years, but first since Russia invaded Ukraine without provocation and forced Kovtun to flee his homeland.
“It’s a hard time, so it’s a very special medal,” Kovtun said through a translator.
The International Olympic Committee has not said yet whether athletes from Russia or Belarus will be allowed in Paris or even when it will make a decision. But despite vehement objections from Ukraine, the IOC has said the individual sports federations should find “a pathway” for “individual neutral athletes” to return to competition. The International Gymnastics Federation has said it will do so beginning Jan. 1.
The issue has particular meaning to Kovtun. The week after Russia invaded Ukraine, Kovtun had to share a podium with a Russian athlete who wrote the pro-war “Z” symbol on his uniform. Ivan Kuliak was supposedly competing at the World Cup as a “neutral” athlete because Russia had been banned.
Kuliak was suspended for a year for the demonstration.
“It was a hard day because we didn’t know what to do. We didn’t know what will be with our country,” Kovtun said.
Though Kovtun said his family is safe, he has had to spend the last year in Croatia so he can continue training. Gymnastics is his love and his job. But it’s also the way he and his fellow athletes can show support for their country — and show Russia that no amount of bombs will destroy Ukraine’s spirit.
“My country has done all (it can) not to let Russian athletes go to Paris because they’re supporting the war. But unfortunately, we can’t do anything,” Kovtun said. “But we will do our best. We will work and we will place.”
veryGood! (92513)
Related
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- Homelessness rose in the U.S. after pandemic aid dried up
- American Climate: A Shared Experience Connects Survivors of Disaster
- Tesla’s Battery Power Could Provide Nevada a $100 Billion Jolt
- Skins Game to make return to Thanksgiving week with a modern look
- How Boulder Taxed its Way to a Climate-Friendlier Future
- Amory Lovins: Freedom From Fossil Fuels Is a Possible Dream
- Atmospheric Rivers Fuel Most Flood Damage in the U.S. West. Climate Change Will Make Them Worse.
- New Mexico governor seeks funding to recycle fracking water, expand preschool, treat mental health
- Once 'paradise,' parched Colorado valley grapples with arsenic in water
Ranking
- 2025 'Doomsday Clock': This is how close we are to self
- Post Roe V. Wade, A Senator Wants to Make Birth Control Access Easier — and Affordable
- A new nasal spray to reverse fentanyl and other opioid overdoses gets FDA approval
- Tina Turner Dead at 83: Ciara, Angela Bassett and More Stars React to the Music Icon's Death
- Moving abroad can be expensive: These 5 countries will 'pay' you to move there
- Duke Energy Takes Aim at the Solar Panels Atop N.C. Church
- New York Rejects a Natural Gas Pipeline, and Federal Regulators Say That’s OK
- Gov. Rejects Shutdown of Great Lakes Oil Pipeline That’s Losing Its Coating
Recommendation
Friday the 13th luck? 13 past Mega Millions jackpot wins in December. See top 10 lottery prizes
FDA advisers narrowly back first gene therapy for muscular dystrophy
Facing cancer? Here's when to consider experimental therapies, and when not to
He helped cancer patients find peace through psychedelics. Then came his diagnosis
Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
South Carolina is poised to renew its 6-week abortion ban
Alex Murdaugh Indicted on 22 Federal Charges Including Fraud and Money Laundering
Rules allow transgender woman at Wyoming chapter, and a court can't interfere, sorority says