En route to winning a silver medal, Laurie Hernandez protested the score on her beam routine on Monday.
That’s not unusual in and of itself across sports, where video
challenges are now routine, but here’s what is: The inquiry alone cost
Team USA as much as $300. Yes, really.
Imagine if an NFL coach wanting to challenge a call
had to throw a few bills on the field as well as a red flag. Imagine if a
tennis player wanting to challenge a line call had to pull out a wad of
cash before protest. Strange, yes, but that’s exactly what happens in
gymnastics competitions, including the Olympics.
Gymnastics coaches can protest a scoring judgment of a gymnast’s routine, but there are some very tight restrictions, as Sports Illustrated noted back in 2012.
Coaches, gymnasts or other country officials must make a verbal
challenge, known as an inquiry, between the posting of the score and the
end of the next gymnast’s routine. They must supply a written version
of the protest within four minutes of making the verbal protest. Oh, and
they must pay a fee, which can be anywhere from $100 up to $300 in
cash, depending on the event.
The inquiry system was devised by the International Gymnastics Federation after
2004, when widespread protests about judging led to a complete overhaul
of the scoring system, including the elimination of the “perfect 10.”
Scores now include an open-ended difficulty score, measuring the
complexity of the routine, and the execution score, measuring how well
the gymnast performed the routine.
If so inclined, the coaches can make the protest,
submitting a (usually preprepared) card explaining the questioning of
the final score. “The coach considers that the Difficulty score for the
exercise presented by the above athlete does not correspond to the real
value of the gymnast’s presentation,” the card reads, and savvy coaches
will have them prefilled in order to save time.
The inquiry involves video review, and if the
initial score is upheld, as Hernandez’s one was on Monday, the
Benjamins are gone. (The fee is donated to the FIG Foundation, a
charitable endeavor.) But if the initial score gets overturned, the fee
gets returned to the team.
Why the fee? Well, it could make a coach think twice before making a
challenge of every single score, or even a challenge every time one’s
available (say, twice per routine). That, or, like every other
Olympic-level sport, everything costs more money than it should.
Jay Busbee is a writer for Yahoo Sports and the author of EARNHARDT NATION, on sale now at Amazon or wherever books are sold. Contact him at jay.busbee@yahoo.com or find him on Twitter or on Facebook.
0 comments:
Post a Comment