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Jordan Chiles may have to give back one of her Olympic medals … ’cause a review board says a challenge to her score shouldn’t have been allowed.
Here’s the deal … during Monday’s women’s floor exercise, Chiles was originally awarded a score of 13.666 — placing her fifth, just off the podium.
WHAT A MOMENT 🥹
Jordan Chiles wasn’t credited for a skill and Team USA asked for a review…
This is her reaction when she found out she won Bronze 🥉
HER REACTION AND EVERYONE ELSE’S ARE SO PURE AND PRICELESS ❤️ pic.twitter.com/ficAJUz1GK
— ALBERT (@Albert_1789) August 6, 2024
@Albert_1789
While at first deflated, her coaches demanded a difficulty review … which the judges granted. After looking at the routine, they increased her score by one-tenth of a point — putting her in third.
So, Chiles won the bronze — controversially bowed to winner Rebeca Andrade with her teammate Simone Biles — and finished her 2024 Olympics with two medals.
Fast forward to Saturday … and the Court of Arbitration for Sport — a review board that settles disputes in sports about rules — declared her coaches put the challenge forward after the one-minute window elapsed, and moved her score back to 13.666.
The Court of Arbitration can change scores but can’t take away Olympians’ medals … so, now it’s up to the International Gymnastics Federation to decide if it will strip Chiles of the medal and award it to fourth place finisher, Romanian Ana Barbosu who scored a 13.700.
Joint Statement from USA Gymnastics and the U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee regarding the CAS decision on the women’s floor final:
CAS Decision: https://t.co/KR6DYsfxEk pic.twitter.com/r1e6QKmKA4
— USA Gymnastics (@USAGym) August 10, 2024
@USAGym
The U.S. Olympic team slammed the decision in their statement backing the gymnast … claiming the review was done in good faith and should be allowed to stand.
Either way, Chiles is leaving Paris with at least one medal … a gold in the team all-around — so, not a total loss for the 23-year-old who will almost certainly compete in L.A. 2028.
The International Gymnastics Federation’s decision should be handed down soon … until then, the future of Chiles’ medal is up in the air.