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BADMINTON BLACK CARD. Head badminton referee Torsten Berg, center, talks to Indonesia’s Greysia Polii, left, after he issued a black card to Polii and her partner Meiliana Jauhari as well as to Ha Jung-eun and Kim Min-jung of South Korea, unseen, during their women’s doubles badminton match at the 2012 Summer Olympics in London. At right is an unidentified South Korean coach. (AP Photo/Andres Leighton)
From The Asian Reporter, V22, #18 (September 17, 2012), page 9.
 
Indonesia imposes four-month ban on badminton pair
The Associated Press

JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) — Indonesia’s leading women’s badminton pair was banned for four months by the national association for their involvement in the play-to-lose scandal at the London Olympics.

Greysia Polii and Meiliana Jauhari were disqualified from the games along with the Chinese world champions and two South Korean teams for trying to deliberately lose group matches in order to gain an easier path through the knockout stages.

Yacob Rusdianto, secretary general of the association known as PBSI, said the same ban from participating in all national and international tournaments until December 3 was also handed to their coach, Paulus Firman.

"We all do not want such thing to have happened, but we have to accept it," Rusdianto told The Associated Press. "The sanctions must be imposed because they have violated the provisions of fair play."

He noted that "the disqualification at the Olympics was already a heavy punishment for Polii and Jauhari."

The ban bars Polii and Jauhari, ranked 14th in the world, from competing in the Indonesia Open Grand Prix Gold 2012 this month in Palembang as well as the Japan Open and China Open.

Polii will also miss the National Sports Games, where she would have represented Jakarta province.

Both were unavailable for comment, but on the PBSI website Meiliana said they accepted the punishment.

"We accept this decision and hope that such incident would not happen again in the future. We only will focus on training to improve our performance when we are allowed to play later," Meiliana said.

Rusdianto reiterated Indonesia’s call for future Olympics to return to a straight knockout tournament to prevent manipulation of the draw. The Badminton World Federation will discuss future formats in November.

The South Korean teams had their lifetime bans from their own badminton officials reduced on appeal to six months, while Yu Yang, half of China’s duo and a 2008 Olympic gold medallist, decided to retire.

 


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