Matthew Pryor in Beijing
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The Paralympic Games were facing a fight for credibility last night after five
nations, including Great Britain, sent a letter to Alan Dickson, the
president of the Cerebral Palsy International Sports & Recreation
Association (CPISRA), which questions the basis of the disability
classification in seven-a-side football.
The Timeshas received a copy of the letter signed by Ukraine, Brazil,
Great Britain, Holland and Ireland, who reacted after one of the Ireland
players, Derek Malone, was ruled ineligible because CPISRA decided that,
although he has cerebral palsy, he does not meet the minimum disability
criteria.
“We the undersigned . . . believe that classification process is not open and
transparent,” the letter read. “Players’ classes are changed too often and
without any traceable criteria. All decision-making is monopolised by a
single person, the chief classifier, ruling the sport [when he is] not even
a football technician. It is frightening to know that CPISRA is about to
implement a new classification system without consulting any member nations.”
The nations demanded clarification of two cases. The ineligibility of Malone
and the reemergence, with a changed class of cerebral palsy, of Lasha
Murvanadze, the Russia player, who suddenly left the 2004 Athens Paralympics
after a protest by Brazil.
As revealed in The Times, there have been serious doubts about many of
the competitors, particularly the Russia team, who beat Holland 12-1 on
Wednesday with skill levels that the Dutch coach and other nations said were
those of professional footballers rather than those with cerebral palsy. “It
[their skill] was ridiculous,” representatives from the Brazil and Ukraine
teams said.
Paul Cassin, the Ireland manager, said: “Everyone in football knows who I am
talking about; there are four to six players from two nations.”
Given such circumstances, it seemed a bizarre decision to ban Malone, who won
a bronze medal in the T38 800 metres in Athens four years ago. “He played 30
minutes and had 12 misplaced passes and no shots on goal, he was our worst
player so I substituted him,” Cassin said. In fact, Malone, 28, was
substituted after 46 minutes on Monday, when Ireland lost 4-2 to Iran.
“Derek’s performance on the field of play appeared better than he demonstrated
during the evaluation [on September 4],” the letter from the CPISRA to the
Paralympic Council of Ireland read. “He ran symmetrically and jumped
symmetrically on the field of play and also squatted down and got back up
without any obvious asymmetry.”
Liam Harbison, the secretary-general of the Paralympic Council of Ireland,
said that this was “simply not true in any form”, adding that his team had
not in any way cheated. “This is very specific to seven-a-side football and
to cerebral palsy and I think it questions the ability of the organisation
to run elite disability sport,” Harbison said. Malaone, the man at the
centre of the storm, said that he was “bitterly disappointed and frustrated”
by the developments.
Dickson entered the dispute yesterday, having travelled to Beijing from Hong
Kong, and had a crisis meeting with the five nations’ representatives. He
said that he would answer their letter this morning, when Russia are due to
play Brazil. “It is not something I treat with any degree of lightness,”
Dickson said. “Clearly we want people to understand the system and that it
is fair to all, which I believe it is.”
The meeting appeared to have smoothed over some of the tension.
“I think it was a start towards a new transparent classification,” Jan-Hein
Evers, the Holland manager, said. “We discussed the letter, but it was
difficult for him to give an answer because he can’t say my classifiers do
everything wrong.”
In theory, this is only an issue for seven-a-side football, which is one of
only two Paralympics sports governed by CPISRA. But inevitably it shines a
light on the cerebral palsy class at the Games and the general issue of
classification. The system of classifying Paralympic athletes according to
their abilities and disabilities is similar to how the problem of doping
affects the credibility of the Olympics. Most of the sports, and
particularly athletics and swimming, have sophisticated, evolving and
mutually agreed tests.
They are not without their grey areas, but it is astonishing that CPISRA
should have allowed this state of confusion and anger to develop. “This is a
football seven-a-side issue, not a cerebral palsy Paralympic issue,” Dickson, who is also member of the governing board of the International
Paralympic Committee, said.
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