An Abnormal Starting Block Incident in the 100-Meter Backstroke Heats at the World Swimming Championships: Was Ryosuke Irie the Target?

Published on July 22, 2019.
After watching a recording of the 100-meter backstroke heats at the World Swimming Championships held in South Korea, the author expresses strong suspicion over an abnormal malfunction involving the starting block.
The incident occurred in a race involving Japan’s world-class backstroke swimmer Ryosuke Irie, raising questions about the fairness of the competition’s operation and the conduct of the South Korean side.

July 22, 2019.
I have just been watching a recording of the heats for the 100-meter backstroke at the World Swimming Championships being held in South Korea, and I was truly appalled by the dreadful nature of Koreans.
I have just been watching a recording of the heats for the 100-meter backstroke at the World Swimming Championships being held in South Korea, and I was truly appalled by the dreadful nature of Koreans.
Irie was scheduled to swim in lane 5, but an unprecedented trick was set up in which that starting lane moved.
Irie narrowly escaped the malicious hand, but the next strong Italian swimmer ended up having to swim again all by himself.
I think everyone who was watching must have been astonished and appalled, but something like the starting plate moved, and he was unable to start.
Watching the officials replace the equipment, many people must have learned for the first time that such a mechanism existed.
Only an exceedingly naïve person, or a pro-Korean faction, would think this was merely a simple malfunction.
The “bottomless evil” and “plausible lies” of Koreans have truly reached their extreme.
In other words, that was a malicious act of the kind South Korea excels at, targeting Irie, Japan’s proud world-class backstroke swimmer.

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