CORTINA D'AMPEZZO, Italy — Ukrainian skeleton athlete Vladyslav Heraskevych took his case to sport's highest court on Friday, detailing the reasons why he wanted to race at the Milan Cortina Olympics in a helmet that paid tribute to his country's war victims.
The arbitrator was moved by his story but ruled against him anyway, denying him his last chance for a win of any kind at this year's Olympics.
The Court of Arbitration for Sport denied Heraskevych's appeal of his disqualification from the men's skeleton race, agreeing with the International Olympic Committee and the sliding sport's federation that his plan to wear a helmet showing the faces of more than 20 Ukrainian coaches and athletes killed since Russia invaded their country four years ago would violate Olympic rules.
''The court sided with the IOC and upheld the decision that an athlete could be disqualified from the Olympic Games without actual misconduct, without a technical or safety threat, and before the start,'' wrote Yevhen Pronin, Heraskevych's attorney.
CAS said the sole arbitrator who heard the case sided with IOC policy about what athletes at an Olympics can say on a field of play — and that the ''memory helmet'' Heraskevych brought to the Milan Cortina Games would not align with the rules.
The arbitrator, CAS said, ''found these limitations reasonable and proportionate," especially since Heraskevych could show his helmet away from the racing surface, such as in interview areas and on social media. Heraskevych also wore the helmet in training runs.
CAS added that the arbitrator ''is fully sympathetic to Mr. Heraskevych's commemoration and to his attempt to raise awareness for the grief and devastation suffered by the Ukrainian people, and Ukrainian athletes because of the war.''
The appeal, which Heraskevych felt he would win, was largely moot anyway. He was disqualified from the competition 45 minutes before its start on Thursday, and whatever CAS said on Friday wouldn't have changed that.