Team Canada Actions Deemed ‘Intentional’ to Hinder US Competitor Chances of Olympic Qualifications, Investigation Finds

Team Canada Actions Deemed ‘Intentional’ to Hinder US Competitor Chances of Olympic Qualifications, Investigation Finds
Katie Uhlaender of the United States slides during the fourth run at the skeleton world championships in Lake Placid, N.Y., on March 7, 2025. AP Photo/Julia Demaree Nikhinson
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An international investigation has determined that the Canadian bobsleigh and skeleton team intentionally altered the outcome of a North American Cup (NAC) competition by deliberately disqualifying its athletes from the race in January.

The issue was raised by U.S. Olympian skeleton racer Katie Uhlaender, who missed an opportunity to qualify for the upcoming Winter Olympics in Italy after four of Canada’s six women athletes were pulled out of the NAC women’s skeleton race, a move that dropped the number of Olympic qualification points available to athletes.

Uhlaender earned 90 points for a first-place finish at the final NAC race on Jan. 11, but if all of the Canadian athletes had competed, she would have earned 120.

Uhlaender and other international teams, including the Dutch, complained about Canada’s move, and IBSF agreed to investigate.

The competition was held in Lake Placid, New York, from Jan. 7 to 11, and six women’s skeleton athletes were registered for competition by Bobsleigh Canada Skeleton, according to an investigation report (PDF) issued on Jan. 28 by the International Bobsleigh and Skeleton Federation (IBSF) Appeals Tribunal.

The IBSF tribunal’s report said none of the Canadian athletes participated in the first training session and only two participated in the official training. IBSF rules require an athlete to complete two training heats without accident to be permitted to compete in the race, thus none of the Canadian athletes were eligible to participate.

The results of the investigation say, however, that while Canada said its decision was made over concerns about its athletes, there was evidence the Canadian team deliberately withdrew its athletes from the competition.

“The Appeals Tribunal is satisfied that the action of the Canadians was intentional and directed to reducing the points available to athletes who slid at the final Lake Placid NAC,” the report said.

“Substantial evidence supports Ms. Uhlaender’s contention that the move was a deliberate effort by Canada to reduce the points available at the final Lake Placid NAC so as to protect its own Olympic quotas.”

Despite that finding, the IBSF tribunal dismissed the case, saying that “the Olympic Movement Code has no provision for the remediation of alleged manipulation.”

The tribunal noted that while disqualification of an athlete can have “collateral impacts,” such as “other participants moving up in the official finishes,” there are “no standards or means by which event records can be changed other than through sanctions.”

Following the IBSF tribunal’s Jan. 28 ruling, Uhlaender filed an appeal of the decision with the Court of Arbitration for Sport, asking the court to determine if Canada’s decision violated the Olympic Movement Code. She is also asking that full points be awarded for the Lake Placid competition.

The veteran U.S. athlete had previously said it was about standing up for fairness in sports.

“Sport is one of the rare spaces that can rise above politics and remind us that we’re human first. They bring us together around things that matter to all of us, and my sliding community has come together to say that integrity matters. Protecting that integrity is bigger than any one athlete, it’s about what we choose to defend,” she said in a Jan. 24 post on X.

Canada Team Responds

Bobsleigh Canada Skeleton, in a statement provided to The Epoch Times, thanked the IBSF for its “thorough, objective, and independent review of the situation.”

“With regards to the most recent IBSF Appeals Tribunal, it is important to recognize that Canada did not violate the NAC competition rules as it relates to entry, withdrawal, or start-list procedures and the decision was made in consultation with IBSF which is why this case has been dismissed three times,” the statement said.

The organization also said it was “committed to competing with honesty, transparency, and respect for the rules and standards that govern our sports.”

The Canadian Press contributed to this report.