The IOC confirms the bronzes of Ruth Beitia and Sete Benavides in London 2012

MADRID, 12 Nov. (EUROPA PRESS) –

Former Spanish athlete Ruth Beitia and Spanish canoeist Sete Benavides learned this Friday, almost a decade after the London Games, that the International Olympic Committee has recognized their bronze medals in high jump and C1-200 after disqualification for doping the Russian jumper Svetlana Shkolina and the Lithuanian Jevgenij Shuklin, respectively.

Beitia and Benavides received the news more than two years ago, when the doping of those involved was confirmed, but both appealed the sentence to the Court of Arbitration for Sport (TAS). That appeal was dismissed last April and it was not until this Friday that the International Olympic Committee (IOC) ratified it.

“The decision was made during today’s meeting of the Executive Board of the International Olympic Committee following the disqualifications of several athletes. The results of their events were adjusted accordingly by the International Federations involved,” the IOC said in a statement.

In these five London 2012 events, the one of Ivan Ukhov stands out, who will lose his Olympic gold in high jump to the benefit of the American Erik Kynard, and the aforementioned Svetlana Shkolina, who finished third in the women’s event and will now definitively give up her position – and his medal- to the Cantabrian Beitia.

The former mountain jumper, retired from top competition since 2017 and an Olympic gold a year earlier in Rio, finished fourth in that London final by jumping three centimeters less than Shkolina.

After this sanction, the Russian has seen all its official results eliminated between July 16 and December 31, 2015, a period that includes London 2012, so the Santander automatically wins the bronze medal. In addition, the Cantabrian also went from bronze to silver at the 2013 World Cup in London, where Shkolina was proclaimed the winner.

For his part, Benavides from Cordoba finished fourth in the C-1 200-meter canoeing event of the Olympic final in London. Lithuanian Jevgenij Shuklin -silver- tested positive for consumption of an anabolic steroid. Benavides, in this way, ascends to the third step of the podium and the Russian Ivan Shtyl, who was third, becomes a new Olympic runner-up.