• Flying SquidM
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    1 month ago

    It’s 100 grams. If it was a kilogram, I’d get it. Or even over 500 grams if they want to round up.

    • FuglyDuck
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      491 month ago

      then the new weight becomes 50.1kg.

      or if you’re rounding to the nearest kg, then 50.49 kg becomes the new restriction. except what if it was 50.51? it’s just 2 grams more. what’s the big deal?

      • Flying SquidM
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        -11 month ago

        I thought the next weight class was one kilogram higher. Is it not?

        • FuglyDuck
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          81 month ago

          they’re in the lowest weight class, under 50kg. the next is 50-53 kg.

          Doesn’t really matter where you put the line. it’s gotta go somewhere and at that level, they’re always going to be gaming the system to get an advantage, and any sport with a weight class, that means doing things to temporarily drop weight for the weigh in ceremony. (not eating, dehydrating yourself. getting as naked as you can without the judge eyeing you.)

    • @stoly
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      241 month ago

      I’m afraid that the Olympics are one place you have to be strict. You can’t trust people to be honest or fair

      • Flying SquidM
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        -11 month ago

        I think the Olympics can trust their own scales. At least I would hope so.

        • @stoly
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          51 month ago

          I’m surprised she didn’t avoid food or water for a bit. Maybe they miscalculated what the final weight would be

          • @reddig33
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            161 month ago

            She did. If you read the article they had to give her IV fluids after failing to qualify because she was dehydrated.

            I’m wondering if she just cut her hair, or shaved her head completely.

          • @dogslayeggs
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            51 month ago

            She did. She was 2kg over the day before and went on an extreme dehydration and exercise protocol to try to drop down. She missed the cutoff but was so badly dehydrated that she needed IV fluids.

          • FuglyDuck
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            31 month ago

            she probably did. At that level, they want to be just as close to the restriction as possible while still being under. I can easily lose a kilo or two taking my morning piss.

    • @SuperIce
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      181 month ago

      She weighed a couple kilos over before this. In order to try and meet the minimum weight, she didn’t drink water for a day while exercising intensely to sweat a lot. She was so dehydrated that they gave her IV fluids after she failed the weigh-in. The weight category she tried to compete in was way too low for her.

      • @insaneinthemembrane
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        -51 month ago

        But she weighed in every other day too so she was the correct weight every day so far. One day she’s 100g over and she loses her chance for a gold medal. That’s harsh AF.

        • @Cypher
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          91 month ago

          The rules are known to all competitors. It must remain harsh in order to be as fair as possible.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 month ago

      ???

      She weighted 2 kilos more than allowed the day before, putting her over 50, even almost making it to 53 which would be 2 weight classes over.

      They put her in dehydration, diet, “trash bag” running to get all sweat out, a Sauna in the morning of the weight-in (but she wasn’t sweating anymore), they removed blood from her, and as a last measure, cut her hair.

      She failed.

      She needed IV injections right after the moment of the weight-in by the committee. She then was hospitalized and remains hospitalized. It seems that luckily she is fine.

      Disqualification is there to prevent countries pushing their athletes through these ordeals, which have long-term consequences on their health.