At the Tokyo Olympics this time, there are many cases where many slanderous injuries are posted on the athlete's SNS personal account, and in response to this, there are cases where competition groups and related parties also respond online.

"Not worthy of a champion" A series of slanderous slander

Daiki Hashimoto, who won the gold medal in the gymnastics men's individual all-around, posted a slanderous defamation from a person who seems to have been supporting other athletes on his SNS personal account.



There are comments such as "I don't deserve the champion. The champion was stolen" and "I should be ashamed of how I won the gold medal", saying that the vault score was unreasonably high.



In response to this situation, the International Gymnastics Federation has announced the details of the scoring and explained on Twitter that the examination was correct, and the influence is spreading.

In response to this, Hashimoto acknowledged the athlete who has made efforts as a national representative player on his personal account, "FIG (International Gymnastics Federation) has given a formal scoring result. The deduction items are clearly stated." I hope that more people will praise it and fewer people will do what appears to be slanderous. "

"Please, please," Yuki Ota complained.

In addition, Yuki Ota, who won the silver medal for the Beijing Olympics as an individual and the London Olympics for the men's fencing, posted a tweet on his Twitter that begins with "Request to everyone".



Immediately after Japan lost to France in the semi-finals of the men's fencing group, he complained, "Currently, we are in a situation where we can't stop slandering certain players. It's a sad situation as we are preparing for the bronze medal match." ..



"To this day, athletes, coaches, and staff have faced the competition with bloody feelings. Word violence against such athletes is unacceptable." It's time to give warm words and messages. Please don't hit the players with negative emotions. "

Many people who saw Mr. Ota's tweet said, "There are far more people who support and love you than those who are slanderous. Thank you for your impression."