lam1ko1 wrote:The only way USA boxing gets past this is to stick to their decision. How do you think the other boxers will react or have confidence in the coach,if Luis Yanez is allowed on the team.
Let them make a decision and hopefully it's the right one.
My understanding is that at this point it is up to the appeals committee (USA Boxing) and after that - an arbitrator (independent) per USOC policy. During arbitration, which is not done in a legal courtroom, the arbirtator can look at a lot more evidence (past boxer infractions and punishment, affidavits, etc) than in a courtroom when deciding his/her recommendation. If this is the case, I would think Yanez may have a good shot at getting back on the team. Yanez' lawyer said that the basis of their argument will be that Luis earned an automatic berth to Beijing in October at the AIBA World Championships. They may argue that this shouldn't be revoked for "not training". . . .
I agree with some of the other posts - that at this point, given what has been said by both sides, I don't know if it is a good or bad to reverse the decision as far as team morale, team momentum, etc.
I am no lawyer, but I did stay at a Holiday Inn (and watched a lot of Law & Order), so Dennis & Mel, am I correct about the arbitration?