The Algerian, 25, won women’s welterweight gold in Paris this summer a year after being disqualified from the World Championships for reportedly failing gender eligibility tests.
The IBA said Khelif “failed to meet the eligibility criteria for participating in women’s competition”.
The IBA defines a woman, female or girl as “an individual with chromosome XX” and men, males or boys as “an individual with chromosome XY”.
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The IOC questioned the legitimacy and credibility of the IBA’s tests, saying they could not be relied upon.
The dispute meant the IOC was responsible for running the boxing competition at the Paris Olympics and applied less stringent eligibility criteria.
Khelif and Taiwan’s Lin Yu-ting, who was also banned by the IBA, were both cleared to compete at the Olympics by the IOC.
A chaotic news conference held subsequently by the IBA did little to clear the confusion around Khelif and Lin’s bans.
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Chief executive Chris Roberts said the pair had “chromosome tests”, while president Umar Kremlev appeared to suggest the tests determined the fighters’ testosterone levels.
The BBC has been unable to determine what the eligibility tests consisted of.
Carini later apologised to Khelif, saying she was ‘sorry’ for the backlash the Algerian received after the fight.
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Speaking after her Olympic victory, Khelif said she had been a victim of “bullying” and that the IBA “hate me”.
“I am fully qualified to take part in this competition. I am a woman like any other woman,” said Khelif.
“I was born a woman. I have lived as a woman. I competed as a woman – there is no doubt about that.”
“All the athletes who participated in the boxing tournament at the Olympic Games Paris 2024 complied with the competition’s eligibility and entry regulations, together with all the applicable medical regulations enacted by the Paris 2024 Boxing Unit (PBU). As with previous Olympic boxing competitions, the gender and age of the athletes were based on their passport details,” the IOC added.
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BBC Sport has contacted Khelif’s representatives for comment.
Nico Hulkenberg has revealed how the marshals at Turn 1 for the Formula 1 Brazilian Grand Prix were “partying” after illegally helping the Haas driver rejoin the race after an off.
The German spun out in difficult conditions at Interlagos and although he failed to reach the barriers at the first corner, he became beached on a crest in the run-off area, with his rear wheels in the air.
This led to the use of the virtual safety car – one which brought race-defining pit stops – but instead of Hulkenberg retiring, he was pushed off the ledge and continued.
But the use of outside assistance contravened F1 regulations and saw Hulkenberg disqualified – the first driver shown the black flag since the Canadian Grand Prix in 2007.
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Recapping his race, Hulkenberg said: “I think it was going OK on the inters actually; I was in a train with Pierre [Gasly] and Fernando [Alonso] for a long time, before we pitted. So I think we were going OK – it wasn’t dreadful, but it wasn’t amazing either.
“Just after the pit stop, our race somehow… obviously it finished pretty quickly and it all went south from there.”
Nico Hulkenberg, Haas VF-24
Photo by: Lubomir Asenov / Motorsport Images
On the incident that ultimately saw him disqualified, Hulkenberg explained: “They [the marshals] came out, they pushed me off and they were really happy with themselves.
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“They were partying and pushing me on and saying, ‘come on, go, let’s go, this race isn’t finished’. In that moment, you don’t really think, you don’t care to be honest as well.
“You just continue and you deal with the consequences later.”
The race would further hinge on a red flag just laps after Hulkenberg had triggered the virtual safety car as a deluge of rain and Franco Colapinto’s crash under safety car conditions left race control with no alternative.
Having made it to the pits under the red flags before being told of his disqualification, Hulkenberg dealt with the worst of the weather and insisted: “Definitely amongst the toughest conditions that I’ve raced in.
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“Incredibly low grip, a very, very narrow window, very hard to make no mistakes. It was very tough.”
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FOR 28 YEARS, Russ Bray was known as ‘The Voice’ of darts, the man with the husky-throated ONE HUNDRED AND EIGHTY calls.
Whenever there were three successive Treble 20s, his signature growl – the result of chain-smoking since the age of 10 – would immediately fill the room and get sozzled fancy-dress punters on their feet.
Refereeing in darts is one of the most complex jobs in sport because officials are “literally adding, subtracting and multiplying” all in a split second and accompanied by a wall of noise.
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But as the sport outgrew smoke-filled halls and pubs and audiences started to pack out Ally Pally and football stadiums, Bray became as famous as some of the players on stage.
The role has seen him call 180s on oches as far flung as Australia, Japan, Dubai, Bahrain, Las Vegas and even Mongolia.
Semi-retirement began in January when the microphone was hung up – his last game was the epic Luke Humphries v Luke Littler World final, which was watched by 4.8million people on Sky Sports.
In his excellent autobiography ‘All About Darts’ – which is out on Thursday – the “pretty ordinary bloke” from Essex reveals his plans to take tungsten throwing around the globe in his new capacity as a PDC ambassador.
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Bray said: “I’ve been a lucky sod with the best seat in the house to watch darts grow from those humble beginnings to the global phenomenon it is now.
“And let me tell you, it’s been a wild journey. Where next for darts? I honestly think there are no limits.
“What about Africa? The PDC has had two or three tournaments in South Africa, which worked well and pulled great crowds. But Africa is a huge continent.
“I’m chatting to guys in Chile about trying to set up a tournament there. Argentina, Brazil. It’d be sensational to get things moving in South America.
“And, as far as I’m concerned, it’s a matter of not if, but when.
I can’t tell you that’, says ref leaving Nathan Aspinall in stitches after darts star asks bizarre question
“Darts will reach all four corners of the world, eventually. And if I can help it along the way, so much the better!”
Bray, who grew up in South Ockendon, was an international high jumper until he snapped his coccyx while pole vaulting at Crystal Palace and was helped to hospital by Steve Ovett.
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He first threw darts in 1975 and played to a decent standard, competing against “larger-than-life first generation of legends”.
These included drinking pal Eric Bristow (“a Jekyll and Hyde character”), John Lowe, Cliff Lazarenko and Jocky Wilson – the irate Scotsman was “seriously p***ed off” when he lost their first encounter.
Bray joined the Metropolitan Police after leaving school and as a traffic cop he worked during the Trooping the Colour at Horse Guards Parade, Miss World contests and was an outrider for the first London Marathon in 1981.
The other side of that job, however, left deep mental scars, seeing “awful stuff” like “mangled bodies and decapitated heads”.
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He recalled: “When you’ve had to try mouth-to-mouth resuscitation on a kid who is already dead and is lying in the road as her mum screams and holds her hand, it stays with you.”
After leaving the force in 1989, Bray did security work, delivered parcels and was a driving instructor for BSM, though sitting alongside slow drivers “did my head in”.
At the weekends, he often “drove blushing brides to the church on time” and notable nuptials involved the likes of Kim Wilde, Alan Sugar’s daughter and some Premier League footballers.
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Yet it was when he made the permanent move to the World Darts Council (WDC) – the body that became the Professional Darts Corporation (PDC) – that his calling in life flourished in the summer of 1996.
This followed a bitter split from the British Darts Organisation (BDO) three years earlier when supremo Olly Croft famously told the high-profile deserters: “I don’t owe darts players a living. I don’t owe them a kidney stone!’
As Phil Taylor dominated the landscape – The Power “did for darts what Tiger Woods did for golf, invented new standards of untouchable brilliance” – Bray was often by his side calling out the winning checkouts.
Next month he will not be reffing at the Paddy Power World Darts Championship.
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Instead, he can watch the sport on the TV and marvel at 17-year-old sensation Littler, who “people in remote Guatemalan villages have heard of”.
Bray said: “Luke has the attributes to become like Phil Taylor and dominate darts for the next 20 years.
“Will he want to? Only he can answer that. But even in the first few months of his career, the effect he’s had on the sport is unbelievable.
“In fact, here’s a thought. In the not-too-distant future, I can easily imagine a World Championship final between Luke Littler and Beau Greaves.
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“And how good would that be? I might even come out of retirement to call that one…”
All About Darts: The Ultimate Guide to the World’s Greatest Sport by Russ Bray (£16.99) is out now
One of the most influential athletic commission directors is on Jon Jones’ side.
At UFC Edmonton this past weekend, the MMA game changed as the new unified rules went into effect for the first time. Those rules updated the “grounded opponent” rule and also removed the previously banned “12 to 6 elbow” from the list of fouls. The small but significant changes are sure to impact the way fights unfold in the future, but it’s possible that one result from the past could also be altered: Jon Jones’ loss to Matt Hamill.
At The Ultimate Fighter 10 Finale back in 2009, Jones suffered the only loss of his career thus far when he was disqualified by referee Steve Mazzagatti for illegal 12 to 6 elbows after Hamill was unable to continue. Following the announcement of the new rules, Jones made his case for overturning the result so he can have an undefeated record. And California State Athletic Commission Director Andy Foster agrees.
“The rule is what it was then. It’s different now,” Foster told Ariel Helwani on Tuesday. “It would be hard to go back. I’d be actually supportive of getting rid of that, but it’s not my decision. But I think it’s hard to go back with the rule being different than it is now.
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“Yeah, [the result changed] to a no-contest,” Foster continued when asked. “ … I didn’t like the way it was enforced back then, but that’s 14 years ago. … We’re talking about 14 years later. At the time I thought there were other ways that you might could handle that situation other than just flat giving the guy a loss.”
At the time, Mazzagatti’s decision was extremely controversial as Jones was dominating the fight and Hamill was nearly out before the illegal blows occurred. And Foster agrees that Mazzagatti could have done differently.
“Disqualification should be the last resort a referee goes to,” Foster said. “That should be after you’ve used all the tools in your toolbox. We train these guys and we teach them, I know John McCarthy and the rest of the guys do, you’ve got a lot of things you can go to, a lot of things you can look at. Let’s do that before we disqualify people.
“Herb Dean is probably the gold standard of refereeing in the world right now. You’ll see him and he’ll methodically go through everything before — I don’t know if I’ve seen Herb disqualify somebody. … He’s very good at going through a lot of different things before you ever get to that.”
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Unfortunately for Jones, Foster is not the one he has to convince becuase the fight took place in Las Vegas. And though Jones has plenty of support on this issue, even from some unlikely sources, for the time being it seems likely that instead this incident will live on in the lore of MMA: the only time Jones ever lost.
Emmanuel Acho, LeSean McCoy, James Jones and Chase Daniel discuss whether it is an issue the Philadelphia Eagles did not make a move at the trade deadline for the first time since 2020.
Doris’ ascension to Ireland captain follows a similar change at his club with Leinster boss Leo Cullen promoting him in September after James Ryan and Garry Ringrose shared leadership duties during the 2023-24 season.
Naturally, the 26-year-old is being talked about as a candidate for the British and Irish Lions captaincy under Farrell, who will lead the side’s tour to Australia next summer.
When asked about what leadership qualities he sees in Doris, Farrell said: “He’s popular among the group because there’s no ego.
“He’s unbelievably diligent in getting his own stuff right. He’s professional and come on leaps and bounds over the past four years. He’s comfortable in his own skin.”
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Farrell added: “He’s like a sponge, learning from the leaders he’s had the pleasure to sit alongside in his international career.
“He’s taken it all in. He’s calm, he’s not panicking, he’s taking it all in his stride. That puts everyone else at ease. He’s very comfortable at allowing others to lead at the same time.
Jon Anik doesn’t agree with Dana White, believing that Islam Makhachev should be No. 1 pound-for-pound over Jon Jones.
Lightweight champion Makhachev (25-1 MMA, 14-1 UFC) is ranked No. 1 pound-for-pound in the UFC rankings, which has caused White to melt down on more than one occasion. White argues that Jones is undeniably No. 1, even though he currently sits at No. 3 behind light heavyweight champion Alex Pereira and Makhachev.
Anik agrees with the UFC rankings as he thinks Jones (27-1 MMA, 21-1 UFC) having not competed since claiming the vacant heavyweight title in March 2023 plays a big part.
“Islam Makhachev’s ability to find that takedown and find that submission in his last title defense against Dustin Poirier is about as good as it gets,” Anik told Kevin Iole. “For me, he was the guy going in, so I don’t know that he loses that perch for me. I have always put 155 pounds on a pedestal. I do believe 155 pounds is the deepest division.
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“And part of the reason why Ilia Topuria is getting Fighter of the Year consideration, and rightfully so over Alex Pereira, is because of the depth of his division. But for me, it is Islam Makhachev every day of the week. Jon Jones is in the conversation, but inactivity, I think, largely takes him out of the discourse.”
If Jones retires, Anik OK with it
Jones is scheduled to defend his heavyweight title against Stipe Miocic (20-4 MMA, 14-4 UFC) in the UFC 309 main event Nov. 16 at Madison Square Garden in New York.
“If Jon Jones doesn’t fight Tom Aspinall after raising a 16th championship banner in Albuquerque, New Mexico in theory by beating Stipe Miocic, I don’t know that anybody would really judge him,” Anik said.
“Yes, the competitor that resides within Jon Jones, there could be no higher note upon which to go out than to beat either Tom Aspinall or Alex Pereira for Jon Jones, right? But the dude doesn’t need that high note. He’s the greatest of all time.”
For more on the card, visit MMA Junkie’s event hub for UFC 309.
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