
Three more ski jumpers suspended as cheating scandal engulfs sport
World championships medalists Robin Pederson and Kristoffer Eriksen Sundal were provisionally suspended along with Robert Johansson over suspicion of illegal manipulation of jump suits, the International Ski and Snowboard Federation said.
They follow the suspensions on Wednesday of Olympic gold medalists Marius Lindvik and Johann André Forfang in a scandal that came to light after Norway team officials manipulated suits to improve aerodynamics and help athletes fly farther.
FIS said it was asked to seize all jump suits used by Norway at the world championships in Trondheim last week and found no irregularities. But it said findings that 'raised additional suspicions of manipulation' led to the suspensions of Pederson, Sundal and Johansson, who will not be able to take part in any events organized by FIS or national ski associations.
'The rules are quite clear. The rules are made by all the ski family,' FIS secretary general Michel Vion told a news conference in Oslo where a World Cup event started on Thursday. 'We know exactly the situation and I heard [it said] that, 'Yeah, but ski jumping is special. They [are always] on the limit, we can play' ... No, there's no play. There's no game here. It's only rules.'
It is not known how widespread the practice of manipulating pre-approved suits is within ski jumping.
Lindvik and Forfang said they knew nothing about deliberately altered equipment, but their coach Magnus Brevig and equipment manager Adrian Livelten confessed and were stood down from their jobs.
The investigation will be made by the FIS independent ethics and compliance office.
'We are all aware that this is not the best moment for ski jumping, but I think this is the way that we want to go,' FIS race director of ski jumping Sandro Pertile said. 'In this case we have, we are into an intentional manipulation. We cannot communicate all the details but I think that we are on a good way to clarify the topic.'
FIS said all suits would be checked at the event in Oslo.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Metro
19 minutes ago
- Metro
Gary Neville rules Chelsea and two other teams out of Premier League title race
Gary Neville has ruled three teams out of the Premier League title race after an intriguing opening weekend of the new season. Defending champions Liverpool began their title defence with a 4-2 win over Bournemouth and there were also wins for Arsenal and Manchester City. Arsenal ground out a 1-0 victory over an improved Manchester United while Man City put four past Wolves. Neville believes Liverpool, Arsenal and Manchester City will battle it out for the title and narrowly favours the Gunners after the opening-weekend results and performances. Given the strength of Liverpool, Arsenal and Man City, Neville has already ruled Chelsea, Newcastle United and Aston Villa out of competing for the title. Metro's new weekly football newsletter: In The Mixer. Exclusive analysis, FPL tips and transfer talk sent straight to your inbox every Friday – sign up, it's an open goal. Club World Cup and Conference League Chelsea could only draw 0-0 with Crystal Palace in their Premier League opener, while it was also goalless in the Midlands between Villa and Newcastle. 'Between Liverpool, Arsenal and Man City, all of them have got cases to win the Premier League,' former England defender Neville said on his Sky Sports podcast. 'All equal cases as well, I don't think you can look at any of the three and think they're definitely above the others. 'I'm going on Monday Night Football tomorrow and will make a prediction and I'm probably going to go with Arsenal bexause I've gone with them the last three seasons! 'But honestly, Liverpool could easily win the league, especially if they get Alexander Isak, they could easily win the league by five or six points. Liverpool 7/4Arsenal 2/1Manchester City 3/1Chelsea 11/1Manchester United 28/1Tottenham 50/1Newcastle United 66/1 Aston Villa 100/1 (Odds courtesy of Betfair) 'We could be staring the obvious in the face with Man City signing [Tijjani] Reijnders) and getting Rodri back. They've got the best striker in the league and probably the world [Erling Haaland] who scores 40 goals a season. 'We could look back in six months and be saying it was staring us in the face because City have got a treble-winning spine, they've got new players in who look outstanding and they've got the best forward in the league. 'Then you look at Arsenal and think the last two pieces of the jigsaw have been filled with [Viktor] Gyokeres and [Martin] Zubimendi. The defence looks outstanding, they look like a real team and they're tough to beat. 'All three of those teams have got genuine cases, Liverpool may be slight favourites but I don't think any club will be completely confident to win the league even though they all have a great chance. It's really close I think.' Asked whether he believed Chelsea, Newcastle or Aston Villa were capable of mounting title challenges, Neville added: 'I'm not being dismissive but they just haven't got that experience, that maturity, they've title-winning feeling about them yet. More Trending 'Newcastle or Aston Villa are not going to win the league. Chelsea obviously won the Club World Cup and finished in the Champions League positions last season. 'When I look at them, they have a lot of good young players. But you're not looking at [Joao] Pedro or [Liam] Delap in the same way you're looking at Arsenal or Liverpool's forwards, you're just not. 'They're good players and I think Chelsea will have a good season but I don't look at them and see a title-winning spine. They're not ready. That's not just because of the results over the weekend. 'For me, I think Liverpool, Arsenal and Manchester City will be fighting it out for the title this season.' For more stories like this, check our sport page. Follow Metro Sport for the latest news on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram. MORE: Micah Richards tells Arsenal to sign £80m star after Manchester United win MORE: Arsenal star in talks to leave after being left out of squad against Man Utd MORE: Ian Wright names Man Utd star who was 'nowhere near good enough' against Arsenal


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
England's Marlie Packer: ‘This team is No 1 in the world – we're going to be under scrutiny'
'If you asked me at the start of pre-season: 'Am I going to this World Cup?' No. I didn't think I was going,' says the former England captain Marlie Packer. Self-doubt around her selection may surprise a lot of people. A World Cup winner in 2014, the 35-year-old will compete in her fourth successive global showpiece for the Red Roses after being duly confirmed in the 32-player squad for the host nation. But Packer has been through a lot in the past 12 months. She was named world player of the year in 2023 and during the two seasons that she led England, the side won all 20 games. Then, in January, the openside flanker had the captaincy taken away, with the second-row Zoe Aldcroft given the armband. Packer was made a vice-captain for the 2025 Six Nations but was included in only two matchday squads. Defiance and determination have been hallmarks of her 111-cap international career. She has built a resilience and is keen to push the message that whatever is right for the team to put them in the best position to win the World Cup when it gets under way on 22 August is the decision she will always agree with. But she also describes decisions out of her control in 2025 as 'tough'. When asked which hurt more, having the captaincy taken from her or being left out of matchday squads Packer lets out a little laugh, looks away out of the window and is a little emotional before saying: 'That's a question isn't it?' She adds: 'When me and Mitch [the coach John Mitchell] sat down and talked about the captaincy, I am an openside flanker and what he sees and wants from his flanker is to cover six and eight; I don't cover six and eight in the role he wants it to be. 'The game has changed and evolved, that is the way he wants to play. I knew if I wasn't starting that I am more likely not to be in that matchday 23. He has told me that in black and white. I know where I stand and where I sit. 'Anything can happen, injuries happen so I always have to make sure I am ready. But with that, all I can keep doing is when we do extras at the end of training sessions I am showing I am upskilling myself in those areas so if I ever was called upon I know I can do what is asked of me. That's all I can do. 'I'm not going to lie to you and sit here and say that being left out of the matchday 23 wasn't hard but what happened is that even though I wasn't in the matchday 23, I still travelled with the squad, I was still a massive part of it. I felt so much value in that.' Nonetheless, being left out for the France game at Twickenham – when England squeaked to a 43-42 victory to seal their grand slam in April – stung. 'It's always tough not to be selected for the France game,' Packer says. 'Playing at Allianz Stadium is everything. Two years ago when I captained my country to a world-record crowd and my son was mascot, that is one moment I bottle up and it means everything. 'But at the start of the game week [in 2025] Mitch says: 'I want you in the coaching box with us.' The value of learning what it's like to be up there, what he is thinking, what he is seeing, the plans. You're in the know, you're trusted. That does mean a lot. 'He'll say it; it's one man's decision and it's tough. But he genuinely cares and I know he does and I genuinely care about him and this squad as well.' Mitchell was full of praise for Packer at the World Cup squad announcement and it is clear she remains a key aspect of the Red Roses machine. She is also one of the most experienced in the squad with only Emily Scarratt – who is poised to feature in her fifth tournament – having played in more. But still doubt remained in her mind over her own selection. 'Oh yeah,' Packer responds when asked if there were any worries around her selection. '100%, of course. Any athlete would tell you that in any sport. If you get comfortable being where you are then it's going to get taken from underneath you. 'You get swamped down with things but you have to keep pushing yourself to be the best of the best. We ain't got time for people to be complacent in their role and in their job. We need to keep elevating each other and being the best of the best because that is the difference between winning and losing a World Cup. 'I put myself in the best possible step to go to this World Cup. I came into pre-season, I felt fit, strong, and good. Sign up to The Breakdown The latest rugby union news and analysis, plus all the week's action reviewed after newsletter promotion 'I am actually really happy … with Mitch's communication with me about where I am going, what his thinking was and what his decisions were looking like over the warm-up games and pool games. For me I know where I'm at, head down, keep going, keep working hard and keep elevating everyone around me.' The warm-ups have not gone completely to plan, though, with Packer being sent off against Spain on 2 August, risking a suspension that would rule her out of the tournament. A disciplinary panel, however, handed her only a one-game ban, putting her out of the warm-up against France, but leaving her free to play at the World Cup. This may be Packer's fourth World Cup but it is her first at home, something she describes as the 'icing on the cake' with the cherry coming if the team win the trophy. The tournament has already broken records, selling the most tickets of any Women's Rugby World Cup with 350,000 sold so far. The final at Twickenham is expected to be sold out which would set a new milestone for the highest-attended women's rugby game. The Red Roses have the opportunity to do something special by winning the trophy at home but they have fallen at the last hurdle in the previous two tournaments, losing both finals to New Zealand. The talk around that will inevitably grow the further England go in the competition but it is apparently not a focus in the Red Roses camp. Packer says: 'That was three years ago and the one before that was eight years ago, there is no point living in the past. This is a whole new group of players. This is a whole new coaching staff apart from Deacs [the forwards coach Louis Deacon]. You have to be in the here and now. 'The media can say and do whatever they want. Some players are going to read into it, some won't but it's what we know within. That's all that matters. 'We know we are going to be under scrutiny, we are the Red Roses. We have been a professional team for a lot longer than a lot of these other nations. We are the team that is ranked No 1 in the world with the highest-ever ranking that has ever been in rugby – not just women's rugby. We are an outfit that can be scrutinised but what we know is we have got to keep living in the moment and enjoying it.' For Packer, past World Cups are chapters already written. Now, with doubts behind her and selection secured, her eyes are on the story England aim to write in this one.


Telegraph
an hour ago
- Telegraph
Is Rooney the next Lineker? He was more articulate than I expected on Match of the Day
On the face of it, it should not be a problem. One person leaves Match of the Day and is replaced by another. But when the person leaving is Gary Lineker, it all becomes a bit more difficult. Remember, he has been the man in situ for about a quarter of a century. He won the golden boot at a World Cup and never got booked, despite spending much of his playing career in that jungle of the opposition penalty area. So his footballing experience and knowledge was second to none. All right, he got up his employers' noses a few times recently which has resulted in him leaving the BBC before next summer's World Cup. Who to replace him? Well, with seemingly no one obvious candidate, you hedge your bets and hire three. Mark Chapman, very experienced; Gabby Logan, who covers a wide range of sports in exemplary fashion, and Kelly Cates, who has been presenting at Sky Sports for a number of years. But here comes the complicated bit: which of them does what? Chapman presented Match of the Day on Saturday night but not before the evening's Sky football presentation by Cates. Cates had already made her BBC bow earlier in the week by presenting the Uefa Super Cup highlights between Paris St-Germain and Tottenham Hotspur on Wednesday night. Then it was all change on Sunday, as Logan presented the weekend's second helping of Match of the Day, which has replaced what we used to know as Match of the Day 2. One week in and we already have our first look at each of the three new presenters that will frequent our screens this season. As I understand it, there will be no absolute hierarchy among the three, but each will work across the channels as and when required. This is in marked contrast to when broadcasters were immensely protective of their talent and prevented them from working for other channels. It was a completely different scenario when I left Match of the Day. ITV had taken the Premier League away from the BBC and so there were no Match of the Day highlights to worry about until it regained the broadcast rights for the 2004-05 season. This situation, and the new set-up, is so different from anything the BBC has done before, so watching how it evolves this season will be fascinating. Among several things to note about the first Match of the Day, Wayne Rooney was alongside Alan Shearer on the pundits' bench. Match of the Day may have lost one former England great who scored 48 goals for his country, but it appears to have gained another who not only scored 53 goals himself, but also captained the Three Lions. It would seem that Rooney is being groomed for more appearances and he is surprisingly more articulate than one might expect. Maybe he will move into the presenter's seat like Lineker did, but he will have to shake off the reputation of his unsuccessful period in management.