PARIS — A handshake could have cost Olga Kharlan her place at the Olympics. Instead, she won Ukraine's first medal of the Paris Games to give a country at war something to celebrate.
Kharlan overturned a six-point deficit to beat South Korea's Choi Sebin 15-14 for the women's saber fencing bronze medal Monday in a comeback that energized the crowd.
She counted to five on a hand decorated with nail varnish in Ukrainian yellow and blue, a five-time Olympian winning her fifth career medal.
Kharlan's latest medal is nothing like the others.
''I brought a medal to my country, and it's the first one, and it's going to be a good start for all our athletes who are here because it's really tough to compete when in your country is a war,'' she said. ''Every medal, it's like gold. I don't care (that) it's bronze. It's gold.''
Kharlan was disqualified from last year's world championships — a key Olympic qualifier — for refusing to shake the hand of a Russian opponent after winning their bout.
It was an incident that highlighted the tension over whether to allow Russian athletes to keep competing following Russia's 2022 invasion of Ukraine.
Amid a mounting backlash, the International Olympic Committee stepped in to hand Kharlan a ''unique exception'' — a guaranteed spot at the Games. Fencing's governing body rescinded a two-month ban it had imposed along with the disqualification and made handshakes optional soon after.