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Re-emergence of the ugly Aussie | The Australian
* Wayne Smith, Delhi * From: The Australian * October 07, 2010
AUSTRALIA again showed the world the ugly side of its sporting face as a second competitor diced with expulsion from the Delhi Commonwealth Games yesterday.
Within hours of Australian team chef de mission Steve Moneghetti announcing he had come perilously close to sending wrestler Hassene Fkiri home in disgrace after his disqualification for rudely gesturing to the judges after he lost his gold-medal match on Tuesday night, cyclist Shane Perkins repeated the obscenity.
The cycling team was on a roll at the Indira Gandhi velodrome when Perkins qualified fastest for the keirin final.
But his joy turned first to dismay and then anger when he was disqualified and relegated to the 7-12 ride-off for dangerous riding after South African Bernard Esterhuizen and Scot Ross Edgar were entangled in a horror crash.
The 23-year-old Victorian duly won the meaningless ride-off, only to celebrate by giving officials the two-fingered salute as he crossed the finish line. And just in case they missed it the first time, he repeated the gesture after making a lap of the velodrome. Effectively he also was giving the bird to Moneghetti, who yesterday morning had set forth in the clearest terms what he expected of Australia's Games competitors. A team spokesman said Perkins would face Moneghetti and a disciplinary hearing last night.
Surely the best he can hope for is to receive the same leniency as Fkiri, the former Tunisian wrestler who overstayed his visa following the 2000 Sydney Olympics and nearly overstayed his welcome at the Commonwealth Games after disgracing his adopted country.
Moneghetti conferred long into the night on Tuesday with Australian Commonwealth Games chief Perry Crosswhite to determine an appropriate punishment for Fkiri's poor sportsmanship during and after his gold-medal match against local hero Anil Kumar.
He allegedly headbutted Kumar during their fractious bout and then refused to shake hands with him afterwards.
Moneghetti admitted the starting point for his discussions with Crosswhite had been whether to expel Fkiri from the team.
"It would have been easy to send him home," said Moneghetti. "It was well within our rights to instantly dismiss him from the team and send him home. It would be fair to say that we considered the ramifications of such actions and the impact that that may have on the rest of his life.
"Let's be totally clear here. He's a very experienced sportsman. He's been to the Olympic Games and he's 36 years of age and this was completely out of character. He has shown absolutely no indication of this type of behaviour before."
But while Fkiri might have eluded the ultimate sanction, he still has been heavily punished by Moneghetti who ordered him to apologise in person to both the match referee and the competition manager, after which he will be confined to the village for the remainder of the Games. On his return to Australia he will be required to complete 12 months of community service at a wrestling club in the Sydney suburb of Darlinghurst, under the direction of his mentor and senior wrestling official Larry Papadopoulos.
"His actions were unacceptable for an Australian sportsperson representing their country in international competition," Moneghetti said.
"Publicly, it did not look good. He was having the best competition of his life. He had come through three outstanding rounds and was so motivated by the way he was performing that he had a very, very strong desire to win the gold medal and as the match was unravelling, that personal pressure caused him to make some bad decisions in the final part of that match.
"I my own mind, the most disappointing facet of this whole event was the fact that he would not shake hands with the opposition. You play hard. Australians, we play hard but once the match is decided, we accept the result and we play fair. It was unacceptable the way he treated fellow competitors in that situation."
Fkiri became an Australian citizen after dramatically refusing to return to Tunisia after competing in the Sydney Olympics. After clearing Customs at Sydney airport following the Games, which technically means he had cleared the Australian border, Fkiri somehow made his way back out of the departures area through the crush of people and slipped out of the terminal.
He ultimately applied for Australian citizenship, which was granted after four years, and last year he became eligible to compete for his adopted country.
Wrestling Australia president John Saul told The Australian yesterday that the sport would ensure Fkiri underwent counselling on his return home.
"If there is any further misbehaviour, that would be the end for him as far as we are concerned," Saul said. "I certainly hope this was a one-off incident."
* Wayne Smith, Delhi * From: The Australian * October 07, 2010
AUSTRALIA again showed the world the ugly side of its sporting face as a second competitor diced with expulsion from the Delhi Commonwealth Games yesterday.
Within hours of Australian team chef de mission Steve Moneghetti announcing he had come perilously close to sending wrestler Hassene Fkiri home in disgrace after his disqualification for rudely gesturing to the judges after he lost his gold-medal match on Tuesday night, cyclist Shane Perkins repeated the obscenity.
The cycling team was on a roll at the Indira Gandhi velodrome when Perkins qualified fastest for the keirin final.
But his joy turned first to dismay and then anger when he was disqualified and relegated to the 7-12 ride-off for dangerous riding after South African Bernard Esterhuizen and Scot Ross Edgar were entangled in a horror crash.
The 23-year-old Victorian duly won the meaningless ride-off, only to celebrate by giving officials the two-fingered salute as he crossed the finish line. And just in case they missed it the first time, he repeated the gesture after making a lap of the velodrome. Effectively he also was giving the bird to Moneghetti, who yesterday morning had set forth in the clearest terms what he expected of Australia's Games competitors. A team spokesman said Perkins would face Moneghetti and a disciplinary hearing last night.
Surely the best he can hope for is to receive the same leniency as Fkiri, the former Tunisian wrestler who overstayed his visa following the 2000 Sydney Olympics and nearly overstayed his welcome at the Commonwealth Games after disgracing his adopted country.
Moneghetti conferred long into the night on Tuesday with Australian Commonwealth Games chief Perry Crosswhite to determine an appropriate punishment for Fkiri's poor sportsmanship during and after his gold-medal match against local hero Anil Kumar.
He allegedly headbutted Kumar during their fractious bout and then refused to shake hands with him afterwards.
Moneghetti admitted the starting point for his discussions with Crosswhite had been whether to expel Fkiri from the team.
"It would have been easy to send him home," said Moneghetti. "It was well within our rights to instantly dismiss him from the team and send him home. It would be fair to say that we considered the ramifications of such actions and the impact that that may have on the rest of his life.
"Let's be totally clear here. He's a very experienced sportsman. He's been to the Olympic Games and he's 36 years of age and this was completely out of character. He has shown absolutely no indication of this type of behaviour before."
But while Fkiri might have eluded the ultimate sanction, he still has been heavily punished by Moneghetti who ordered him to apologise in person to both the match referee and the competition manager, after which he will be confined to the village for the remainder of the Games. On his return to Australia he will be required to complete 12 months of community service at a wrestling club in the Sydney suburb of Darlinghurst, under the direction of his mentor and senior wrestling official Larry Papadopoulos.
"His actions were unacceptable for an Australian sportsperson representing their country in international competition," Moneghetti said.
"Publicly, it did not look good. He was having the best competition of his life. He had come through three outstanding rounds and was so motivated by the way he was performing that he had a very, very strong desire to win the gold medal and as the match was unravelling, that personal pressure caused him to make some bad decisions in the final part of that match.
"I my own mind, the most disappointing facet of this whole event was the fact that he would not shake hands with the opposition. You play hard. Australians, we play hard but once the match is decided, we accept the result and we play fair. It was unacceptable the way he treated fellow competitors in that situation."
Fkiri became an Australian citizen after dramatically refusing to return to Tunisia after competing in the Sydney Olympics. After clearing Customs at Sydney airport following the Games, which technically means he had cleared the Australian border, Fkiri somehow made his way back out of the departures area through the crush of people and slipped out of the terminal.
He ultimately applied for Australian citizenship, which was granted after four years, and last year he became eligible to compete for his adopted country.
Wrestling Australia president John Saul told The Australian yesterday that the sport would ensure Fkiri underwent counselling on his return home.
"If there is any further misbehaviour, that would be the end for him as far as we are concerned," Saul said. "I certainly hope this was a one-off incident."