Carini ‘wants to apologise’ to Khelif amid boxing gender row

Angela Carini ‘wants to apologise’ to Imane Khelif after their contentious bout triggered a row over gender eligibility that has engulfed the Olympic Games.

Carini has also now said that she respects the IOC’s decision to allow Khelif to take part in the Paris 2024 boxing tournament.

Algeria’s Khelif and Taiwanese boxer Lin Yu-ting were both disqualified from last year’s World Championships due to the results of an International Boxing Association (IBA) gender eligibility test. But they are allowed to take part in the Olympics, with the International Olympic Committee (IOC) adopting different criteria.

Khelif won her round-of-16 clash with Carini in the women’s 66kg category in just 46 seconds on Thursday after the Italian quit, saying at that time: “I preferred to stop for my health.”

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Sky Sports News’ Geraint Hughes with the latest on the boxing row that is dominating the Olympic headlines

She has now told Gazetta dello Sport: “All this controversy makes me sad, I’m sorry for my opponent, too. If the IOC said she can fight, I respect that decision.”

Carini added that she regretted not shaking hands with Khelif after their contest. “It wasn’t something I intended to do,” she said.

“Actually, I want to apologise to her and everyone else. I was angry because my Olympics had gone up in smoke.”

She continued to say that if she met Khelif again, she would “embrace her”.

Taiwan's Lin Yu-ting (Associated Press)
Image: Taiwan’s Lin Yu-ting is through to the quarter-finals of the Women’s 57kg boxing category at the Paris Olympics

Top seed at featherweight Lin Yu-ting – who would have won a bronze medal at the 2023 World Championships if IBA hadn’t disqualified her – was victorious in her opening bout at these Games on Friday, beating Uzbekistan’s Sitora Turdibekova to reach the quarter-finals, using her height and range to dictate the fight.

The IOC is running the boxing tournament in Paris after the IBA was stripped of its status as the global governing body for boxing last year because it failed to complete reforms on governance, finance and ethical issues.

The IOC said in a statement: “These two athletes were the victims of a sudden and arbitrary decision by the IBA. They were suddenly disqualified without any due process.

“The current aggression against these two athletes is based entirely on this arbitrary decision, which was taken without any proper procedure especially considering that these athletes had been competing in top-level competition for many years.”

What is a DSD?

Medical information is confidential, so we don’t know for certain if the boxers at the heart of this controversy have DSD (differences in sex development).

DSD has caused controversy in sport before, most notably with the two-time Olympic 800m champion Caster Semenya.

The NHS defines DSD as “a group of rare conditions involving genes, hormones and reproductive organs, including genitals. It means a person’s sex development is different to most other people’s.”

This means someone may have sex chromosomes usually associated with being male (XY chromosomes), but reproductive organs and genitals that may look different from usual.

Some people with DSDs are raised as a girl but have XY sex chromosomes, testosterone levels in the male range and the ability to use testosterone circulating within their bodies.

It is possible therefore that someone could be raised as a female but develop the advantages that going through male puberty gives an athlete.

The IBA had earlier criticised the IOC for its “inconsistencies in eligibility”.

“Both Imane Khelif and Lin Yu-ting, post testing, did not meet the required eligibility criteria to compete within the female category of our respective events,” said an IBA statement. “The urgent nature of the decision (to disqualify the boxers) was justified, as the safety of our boxers is our top priority.”

Lin and Khelif will both box in quarter-finals over the weekend with victory guaranteeing an Olympic medal as both losing semi-finalists are awarded bronze medals in Olympic boxing.

Kelif will face Hungary’s Anna Luca Hamo in the 66kg quarter-finals on Saturday and Lin boxes Svetlana Staneva of Bulgaria on Sunday.

Analysis: Will Khelif and Lin win medals?

Lin Yu-ting was awarded the victory via unanimous decision
Image: Lin Yu-ting was awarded the victory via unanimous decision

Khelif and Lin have been boxing on the international circuit for a number of years.

Khelif is a previous Olympian. She boxed at the Tokyo Games in 2021. She won her first bout there but came away without a medal after losing to Ireland’s Kellie Harrington, the eventual champion, in the quarter-final.

She has become a top-level contender, reaching the final of the World Championships in 2022. Amy Broadhurst clearly outboxed her then to win the gold medal.

The following year at the World Championships in India she also reached the final. Notably she was permitted to box four times at that tournament before the IBA administered its gender eligibility test and disqualified her.

Khelif did not have a reputation as a power puncher on the amateur scene so it was all the more surprising to see her finish the Carini bout in under a minute.

Lin has an even longer track record in top-class amateur boxing. At the World Championships in 2016 she lost a tight bout to British star Nicola Adams. She medalled at every Worlds afterwards until 2023 when she would have taken bronze until the IBA also disqualified her for failing a gender eligibility test. She too was permitted to box several times at that tournament before being expelled.

Lin has been highly effective at these major tournaments, but has traded wins and losses with other elite operators. In the last two years Brazil’s Jucielen Cerqueira Romeu, Kazakhstan’s Karina Ibragimova and Olympic champion Sena Irie have all beaten her.

Analysis: ‘Issue is not going away from the Olympics’

Lin Yu-ting is now one won away from a medal at the Olympics
Image: Lin Yu-ting is now one won away from a medal at the Olympics

Rob Harris, Sky News Sports Correspondent:

For days the very staging of this 66kg opening-round fight had been questioned but it also collided with a long-running dispute between the International Olympic Committee and the International Boxing Association.

Is it fair to fear being put in danger by someone far stronger in a combat sport?

Is it fair to exclude someone female at birth who has gone through no treatment to adjust testosterone levels that would gain a competitive advantage?

Mark Adams, of the IOC, said: “This involves real people and we’re talking about real people’s lives here.

“They have competed and they continue to compete in the women’s competition. They have lost and they’ve won against other women throughout, over the years.

“And by the way, this isn’t – we should make this absolutely clear for everyone – this is not a transgender issue.”

But the issue is not going away from the Olympics however much its leadership is asking everyone to “dial it down”.

Read Rob’s analysis in full on the Sky News website

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Source : Sky Sports