U.S. skeleton athlete Katie Uhlaender's complaint that she was robbed of a chance to qualify for the Milan Cortina Games was dismissed by the sport's governing body Thursday, another blow to her quest to make what would be her sixth Olympic team.
Uhlaender said a decision by Canadian coaches to pull some of their sliders out of a North American Cup race held Sunday in Lake Placid, New York, was unfair, since it lowered the total standings points available in that event. Uhlaender won that race.
The International Bobsled and Skeleton Federation, which investigated Canada's decision and the motivation for its move, acknowledged that ''the late withdrawal of athletes intuitively gives rise to concern that the action may have constituted impermissible manipulation,'' but found no rules were broken.
The NAC series is a tier below the World Cup level and tends to be a place for developmental athletes to compete. Uhlaender competed in seven races this season on the NAC and Asian Cup — another lower-tier — circuits in an effort to collect enough points to make the Olympic team after failing to make this season's U.S. World Cup roster.
It's still possible for the 41-year-old Uhlaender to make the Olympic team. But solid results Friday by U.S. athletes Kelly Curtis and Mystique Ro in the World Cup season finale would likely clinch their spots on the Milan Cortina Games roster and shut the door on what Uhlaender says will be her final Olympic bid.
Canada's decision to keep four of its six NAC sliders out of Sunday's race was criticized by some, Uhlaender included, because it also could be viewed as a way of manipulating the field to protect its hope of having its two World Cup sliders — Hallie Clarke and Jane Channell — qualify for Olympic spots.
Bobsleigh Canada Skeleton said earlier in the week that the Lake Placid race week — three NAC races instead of the usual two — ''presented unique circumstances,'' especially for its younger athletes.
''Following a collective assessment by the coaching and performance team, it was determined that continuing to race these athletes was not in their best interests, nor in the best interests of the program," the Canadian team said.