A wave of online controversy erupted this week after French ice dancers Laurence Fournier Beaudry and Guillaume Cizeron narrowly won the gold medal in the ice dance event at the 2026 Winter Olympics, edging out American favorites Madison Chock and Evan Bates by just 1.43 points.
The close finish — one of the tightest in Olympic ice dance history — has sparked intense debate on social media, where many figure skating fans called the result a “robbery” and criticized the scoring.
An online petition demanding an investigation into the judging process has gathered thousands of signatures, with supporters alleging inconsistencies in how judges evaluated elements of the performances.
Former and current skaters have also weighed in. U.S. figure skater Alysa Liu publicly showed support for the American duo amid the judging backlash, while fellow Olympian Amber Glenn addressed the broader controversy on social platforms.
The French win itself was not without its own narrative of scrutiny. Cizeron, the former Olympic champion who retired briefly in 2024 before returning with new partner Beaudry in 2025, has faced personal controversy stemming from past accusations by former partner Gabriella Papadakis — allegations he has denied, calling them a “smear campaign.”
Meanwhile, Beaudry’s previous partner and boyfriend, Nikolaj Sørensen, was suspended in 2024 over sexual assault allegations that were later overturned — a matter that has continued to draw attention.
Despite the backlash, Chock and Bates maintained a respectful tone in public comments following the result, expressing pride in what they described as some of the best skating of their careers.
Their silver medal marks their first individual Olympic medal and caps a 15‑year partnership that has made them fixtures of international ice dance.
As the debate continues online, calls for greater transparency in Olympic judging — particularly in subjective sports like figure skating — show no signs of slowing.