logo
Four Russian figure skaters approved for 2026 Olympics qualification event as neutrals

Four Russian figure skaters approved for 2026 Olympics qualification event as neutrals

National Post14-05-2025
Four Russian figure skaters were approved Tuesday by the International Skating Union to try to qualify for the 2026 Winter Olympics as neutral athletes who have not supported the invasion of Ukraine, including 17-year-old national champion Adelia Petrosian.
Article content
Article content
No Russian athletes, however, were approved to compete in the pairs and ice dance disciplines at a one-off Olympic qualification meeting in September in Beijing. The 2026 Milan-Cortina d'Ampezzo Olympics open on Feb. 6.
Article content
Article content
The ISU said 'not all nominated athletes passed the rigorous screening' and the eligibility decisions by its ruling council are 'final with regard to all applicants and not subject to appeal.'
Article content
Russians and Belarusians have been banned from international skating events since the full military invasion of Ukraine started in February 2022, four days after the Beijing Winter Games closed.
Article content
The ISU previously said Russia and Belarus can have just one competitor — individual, pair, or ice dance couple — in each discipline at the Olympics.
Article content
At the 2024 Paris Summer Games, Russia was banned from team sports though a small group of individual Russian athletes ended up being allowed to compete as approved neutral athletes. They were judged not to have publicly supported the war or have ties to the military or state security agencies.
Article content
A similar process in underway ahead of the Milan-Cortina d'Ampezzo Olympics.
Article content
The ISU said it 'thoroughly examined public appearances and statements made by the nominated (neutral athletes) since February 2022, to assess any active support for the invasion of Ukraine or any contractual links to Russian or Belarusian military and other national security agencies.'
Article content
Petrosian is the likely star name among the Russian figure skaters.
Article content
The two-time national champion turns 18 in June and is coached by Eteri Tutberidze. The storied Russian team mentor was a controversial figure at the Beijing Olympics coaching gold-medal favorite Kamila Valieva through a doping scandal, and the eventual gold medalist Anna Shcherbakova.
Article content
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Injury sidelines Andre De Grasse from Canadian championship, Audrey Leduc wins women's 100 metres
Injury sidelines Andre De Grasse from Canadian championship, Audrey Leduc wins women's 100 metres

CBC

time4 hours ago

  • CBC

Injury sidelines Andre De Grasse from Canadian championship, Audrey Leduc wins women's 100 metres

Andre De Grasse is skipping the Canadian championship in Ottawa due to tightness in his hamstring. De Grasse, a seven-time Olympic medallist and the anchor of Canada's 4x100-metre gold-medal team at the 2024 Paris Summer Games, said the injury will keep him from competing this weekend. "Unfortunately, I won't be competing this weekend," De Grasse told CTV News. "I picked up a little bit of tightness a couple of weeks ago with my hamstring so I'm going to play it safe and not do any extra damage I need to do. I'll just be here this weekend signing autographs, doing meet-and-greets, taking pictures and just hanging out with my fans and making sure everyone has a chance to see me." However, the 200m Olympic champion from 2021 said he'll be good to for the World Athletics Championship when the event takes play in Tokyo from Sept. 13-21. "I have about five-six weeks, so I should be good. It's just a little bit of tightness in my hamstring so I don't want to risk it and make it worse," De Grasse said. "I've been getting a lot of treatment from the team doctors here, making sure I'm ready to go when it matters." On the track, sprinter Audrey Leduc of Gatineau, Que., won the senior women's 100-metres championship on Friday night, clocking 11.06 to top the eight-runner final at the Canadian track and field championships. The 26-year-old Leduc, who holds the Canadian records in the 100-metres (10.95) and 200 metres (22.36) — both set in 2024 — finished just ahead of Olympian Sade McCreath (11.09) of Ajax, Ont., and Jacqueline Madogo (11.21) of Ottawa, who became the 200-metres national champion in 2023. Olympian sprinter Duan Asemota of Montreal won the men's 100-metre championship in a 10.12 photo finish, just edging out Aaron Brown (10.13) of Toronto, who was part of Canada's 4x100-metre relay team that won gold in 2024. Eliezer Adjibi (10.21) of Ottawa finished third.

Calgary Flames defenceman MacKenzie Weegar scores invite to Olympic orientation camp
Calgary Flames defenceman MacKenzie Weegar scores invite to Olympic orientation camp

National Post

time7 hours ago

  • National Post

Calgary Flames defenceman MacKenzie Weegar scores invite to Olympic orientation camp

Calgary Flames rearguard MacKenzie Weegar is officially on the radar to represent Canada at the 2026 Winter Olympics. Article content Weegar was among the invitees announced Friday for Hockey Canada's national teams orientation camp, which is slated for Aug. 26-28 in Calgary and will include the top candidates for the men's, women's and para rosters. Article content Article content The three-day get-together is an off-ice event. The itinerary will include team-building sessions, meetings, presentations and media interviews, but there will not be a star-studded scrimmage. Article content 'While the next several months will bring intense evaluation and difficult roster decisions, we look forward to kicking off the season in Calgary and giving our athletes and staff a chance to come together and start to become one team as we set our sights on February,' said Scott Salmond, Hockey Canada's senior vice-president of high performance and hockey operations, in Friday's announcement. Article content Article content 9⃣2⃣ players from 🇨🇦's men's, women's and para hockey programs have earned invites to National Teams Orientation Camp in Calgary. 9⃣2⃣ athlètes de hockey masculin, de hockey féminin et de parahockey du 🇨🇦 iront au camp d'orientation des équipes nationales à Calgary. — Hockey Canada (@HockeyCanada) August 1, 2025 Article content Weegar, who was raised in the Ottawa area and is now considered the frontrunner to be the Flames' next captain, was also in the mix to wear the Maple Leaf this past winter at the 4 Nations Face-Off, although he ultimately didn't crack Canada's roster. Article content He is among the 13 defencemen invited to the late August camp. Also on that list are the Colorado Avalanche dynamic duo of Cale Makar and Devon Toews, plus Evan Bouchard of the Edmonton Oilers, Noah Dobson of the Montreal Canadiens, Drew Doughty of the Los Angeles Kings, Aaron Ekblad of the Florida Panthers, Thomas Harley of the Dallas Stars, Brandon Montour of the Seattle Kraken, Josh Morrissey of the Winnipeg Jets, Colton Parayko of the St. Louis Blues, Travis Sanheim of the Philadelphia Flyers and Shea Theodore of the Vegas Golden Knights. (The Calgary-raised Makar is one of a half-dozen dudes already named to the roster. The other five are forwards.) Article content As Hockey Canada's brass ponder their blue-line options for Milano Cortina 2026, they will value Weegar's versatility. The 31-year-old is a right-shot who is also comfortable on the left side of pairing, and he is capable of playing major minutes but can also provide the sort of bite that coaches often covet from those in a bottom-pairing role. Article content Weegar notched eight goals and 47 points in 81 games during the 2024-25 campaign. He led the Flames in assists (39), plus-minus (+18) and average icetime (24:10) and was fifth in the NHL in blocked shots (192). Article content

Calgary Flames defenceman MacKenzie Weegar scores invite to Olympic orientation camp
Calgary Flames defenceman MacKenzie Weegar scores invite to Olympic orientation camp

Edmonton Journal

time8 hours ago

  • Edmonton Journal

Calgary Flames defenceman MacKenzie Weegar scores invite to Olympic orientation camp

Article content Calgary Flames rearguard MacKenzie Weegar is officially on the radar to represent Canada at the 2026 Winter Olympics. Article content Weegar was among the invitees announced Friday for Hockey Canada's national teams orientation camp, which is slated for Aug. 26-28 in Calgary and will include the top candidates for the men's, women's and para rosters. Article content The three-day get-together is an off-ice event. The itinerary will include team-building sessions, meetings, presentations and media interviews, but there will not be a star-studded scrimmage. Article content 'While the next several months will bring intense evaluation and difficult roster decisions, we look forward to kicking off the season in Calgary and giving our athletes and staff a chance to come together and start to become one team as we set our sights on February,' said Scott Salmond, Hockey Canada's senior vice-president of high performance and hockey operations, in Friday's announcement. Article content Article content 9⃣2⃣ players from 🇨🇦's men's, women's and para hockey programs have earned invites to National Teams Orientation Camp in Calgary. 9⃣2⃣ athlètes de hockey masculin, de hockey féminin et de parahockey du 🇨🇦 iront au camp d'orientation des équipes nationales à Calgary. — Hockey Canada (@HockeyCanada) August 1, 2025 Article content Weegar, who was raised in the Ottawa area and is now considered the frontrunner to be the Flames' next captain, was also in the mix to wear the Maple Leaf this past winter at the 4 Nations Face-Off, although he ultimately didn't crack Canada's roster. Article content Article content He is among the 13 defencemen invited to the late August camp. Also on that list are the Colorado Avalanche dynamic duo of Cale Makar and Devon Toews, plus Evan Bouchard of the Edmonton Oilers, Noah Dobson of the Montreal Canadiens, Drew Doughty of the Los Angeles Kings, Aaron Ekblad of the Florida Panthers, Thomas Harley of the Dallas Stars, Brandon Montour of the Seattle Kraken, Josh Morrissey of the Winnipeg Jets, Colton Parayko of the St. Louis Blues, Travis Sanheim of the Philadelphia Flyers and Shea Theodore of the Vegas Golden Knights. (The Calgary-raised Makar is one of a half-dozen dudes already named to the roster. The other five are forwards.) Article content Article content Article content As Hockey Canada's brass ponder their blue-line options for Milano Cortina 2026, they will value Weegar's versatility. The 31-year-old is a right-shot who is also comfortable on the left side of pairing, and he is capable of playing major minutes but can also provide the sort of bite that coaches often covet from those in a bottom-pairing role. Article content Weegar notched eight goals and 47 points in 81 games during the 2024-25 campaign. He led the Flames in assists (39), plus-minus (+18) and average icetime (24:10) and was fifth in the NHL in blocked shots (192).

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store