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Argentina Guilty of Horse Cruelty at Atlanta Olympics

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From Staff and Wire Reports

The four members of Argentina’s show jumping team at the Atlanta Olympics were suspended for six months after being found guilty of “severe cruelty” to their horses.

The international equestrian federation reported Monday on the results of a hearing by its judicial committee into the alleged mistreatment of horses by the Argentine riders at Georgia’s Pine Top Farm. The panel listened to evidence and inspected photographs of the training methods used by the Argentine team.

The federation said the riders took their horses over obstacles with wire and nails across the top.

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“To use for training a course of the kind amounts, in the committee’s view, to severe cruelty of which the entire Argentinean Olympic jumping team were guilty,” the federation statement said.

The federation said the team’s Olympic results were erased, the riders were suspended from all international competition for six months starting Nov. 1, and the riders must pay an unspecified amount to cover the cost of the hearing.

Argentina finished 17th in the team show jumping event at the Games. The riders were Oscar Fuentes, Ricardo Kierkegaard, Federico Castaing and Justo Albarracin.

Tennis

Thomas Muster avoided a suspension over his Davis Cup doubles walkout when the International Tennis Federation decided the $8,000 fine it already imposed was enough punishment.

Muster strutted angrily across the court in Sao Paulo, Brazil, last month, waving his racket and trying to draw the umpire’s attention to fans he said had been spitting, cursing and throwing objects at him. They even tried to blind him with mirrors, he said.

Sweden was seeded No. 1 and the United States No. 2 for the 1997 Davis Cup World Group. The other seeded teams in order were France, Germany, the Czech Republic, Italy, the Netherlands and Russia.

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The draw for the competition will be held today with eight other teams being positioned in the 16-team bracket. The other teams are Australia, Brazil, India, Mexico, Romania, South Africa, Spain and Switzerland. A field of 127 teams is entered in ’97 Davis Cup play.

Motor sports

Ernie Irvan was released from Carolinas Medical Center after an overnight stay following a crash at Charlotte Motor Speedway in which he was knocked unconscious Sunday.

Irvan, 37, was injured in a three-car accident during the UAW-GM Quality 500 NASCAR Winston Cup event. Track medical personnel said Irvan was unconscious for about four minutes.

Jerry Petty, medical director for the speedway, said safety personnel took particular precautions with Irvan because of head and chest injuries he suffered in a 1994 crash.

Miscellany

About 50 protesters tried to disrupt the $200,000 Nike Olympia Open golf tournament at Olympia, Wash., as a way to protest what they said were unethical labor practices overseas by Nike Inc.

Nike, an athletic shoe and apparel manufacturer based in Beaverton, Ore., has been the object of protests by activists who contend it pays laborers as little as $1.25 a day in overseas sweatshops. Nike gives $100,000 to the event.

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Thurston County sheriff’s deputies told the demonstrators they would be trespassing if they went onto the club’s grounds, so they chanted and marched along a fence that borders the first hole of the course, trying to disrupt the players. Deputies said the protesters weren’t breaking any noise ordinances.

Name in the News

Andy Hampsten, 34, who won the 1988 Tour of Italy, retired after 10 professional cycling seasons.

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