Iranian Table Tennis Coach Pulls Athlete From Competing Against Israeli Opponent in Special Olympics
An Israeli table tennis player was denied the opportunity to compete on Monday morning at the 2023 Special Olympics World Games held in Berlin, Germany, after the coach of his Iranian opponent pulled his athlete from a match to avoid having him go against a competitor from Israel, The Algemeiner has learned.
David Moshe Keresenti, 17, was set to go head-to-head against an Iranian player in a men’s single match but when the Israeli athlete arrived to compete, he was informed that his opponent’s coach team refused to let the player participate, a representative from the Israeli delegation told The Algemeiner, adding that the coach of the Iranian athlete also asked the match’s referees to disqualify his player, saying the latter had a fever. As a result, Keresenti received a technical win.
The Israeli delegation representative added they do not know the name of the Iranian athlete but according to the website for the Special Olympics, Artin Sarreshtehdari is listed as the only Iranian table tennis player competing in men’s singles. He is a minor and his age is not listed on the website.
Gon Tzuri, head of the Israeli delegation, believes the decision by the Iranian coach to pull his athlete from the match was due to political reasons. Iran refuses to recognize Israel’s existence and has a long-standing ban on having its athletes compete against opponents from Israel in any sport.
The international competition is taking place in Berlin from June 17-25. It is the world’s largest inclusive sports event, with thousands of athletes with disabilities competing in 26 sports. The Israeli delegation won its first medals in the competition on Monday when Sa’ar Buchinder, 30, won gold in the men’s 5,000-meter run for level B and Ron Beck, 16, picked up the silver in the same race for level A.
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