IOC: No medal ceremony for team event, or women's singles if Valieva is top three

Members of the U.S. team from figure skating's team event celebrate placing second at the 2022 Winter Olympics. (Getty Images)

Figure skaters who were in line for medals following the figure skating team event at the 2022 Winter Olympics will have to wait beyond the Games to find out if and when they'll receive them, and would-be medalists in the women's singles event may join them.

Following the Court of Arbitration for Sport's ruling regarding Russian Olympic Committee figure skater Kamila Valieva, the International Olympic Committee announced Monday the medal ceremony for figure skating's team event will not be held during the Games.

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Furthermore, if the 15-year-old Valieva is to finish in the top three of the women's singles competition, the IOC says that event will conclude without an in-venue flower ceremony and without its medal ceremony.

The IOC also asked the sport's international federation, the ISU, to allow an additional skater into the women's free skate if Valieva, who entered the Games as a favorite for the podium, advances from the short program to the free skate; the ISU obliged.

The women's event begins with the short program, which starts at 5 a.m. ET on Tuesday, Feb. 15, and will conclude with the free skate at 5 a.m. ET Thursday, Feb. 17. Thirty women are entered in the short program and 24 of them will move on to the free skate (or 25 if Valieva is among them).

Valieva was one of six athletes who contributed to the ROC team that finished in first place in the team event, which ended Feb. 7; Valieva competed on Feb. 6 and 7. She won both the women's short program and free skate segments, becoming the fourth woman to land a triple axel at the Olympics in the former and the first woman to land a quadruple jump (successfully completing two) during the latter.

ROC won with 74 points overall, followed by the U.S. in second with 65. Canada was third with 63 and Japan fourth with 53.

The medal ceremony was slated to be held Feb. 7, but was initially delayed one day after multiple parties involved agreed holding it late at night prior to an early morning men's practice session was not ideal; the men's short program was held Feb. 8. It was delayed again on Feb. 8 when Valieva's positive drug test was disclosed by the Russian Anti-Doping Agency. She had tested positive for Trimetazidine, a drug common for patients with angina (chronic chest pain), on Dec. 25 during the Russian Figure Skating Championships. The test was administered by RUSADA.

Valieva was provisionally suspended by RUSADA on Feb. 8, which the International Testing Agency made public Feb. 11. Per the ITA, Valieva challenged the suspension and RUSADA lifted its decision on Feb. 9.

RUSADA did not at the time provide grounds for lifting the suspension, so the IOC, World Anti-Doping Agency and ISU appealed the decision.

The CAS made its ruling on Monday, Feb. 14, that the appeal was denied and RUSADA's call to lift the suspension remains in place. In other words, Valieva may compete in women's singles.

Nearly five hours later, the IOC made its announcement regarding the team event medal ceremony -- and potentially for the women's event -- not being held during these Games. It did add, though, that once Valieva's case has concluded it will work with the appropriate National Olympic Committees and athletes to organize "dignified medal ceremonies."

In a response to USA Today columnist Christine Brennan, a United States Olympic & Paralympic Committee spokesperson noted the NOC is "devastated" the nine U.S. team members will leave the Games without their medals.

View social media post: https://twitter.com/cbrennansports/status/1493166483622486020

Based on the results of the team event, the medalists as they stand now would be:

Gold - Valieva, Mark Kondratyuk, Anastasia Mishina/Aleksandr Galliamov, Viktoria Sinitsina/Nikita Katsalapov (ROC)
Silver - Karen Chen, Nathan Chen, Vincent Zhou, Alexa Knierim/Brandon Frazier, Madison Chock/Evan Bates, Madison Hubbell/Zachary Donohue (USA)
Bronze - Wakaba Higuchi, Kaori Sakamoto, Yuma Kagiyama, Shoma Uno, Riku Miura/Ryuichi Kihara, Misato Komatsubara/Tim Koleto (JPN)