"This video is not available." ↑
It's ok; you got it...it's about the scoring system. After reviewing a video section, the judges awarded the young Mongolian three points all together, so now he was leading 7 to 6 with only 18 seconds left. Then he started celebrating too early by dancing in front of his opponent, then his two coaches started celebrating too by jumping in the ring and carrying their protege on their shoulders as the winner, with still 5 seconds left (I believe). Then the judges awarded a point for his opponent, as a penalty against the Mongolian coaches.
And in wrestling if the score is equal @ the end (here it was 7-7), the who who had the last point (even that penalty point for celebrating a little too premeditated), is the overall win win guy.
It's unfortunate because the young Mongolian was simply emotionally happy and didn't mean to end up like this. And he was a good sportsman as he congratulated his opponent. But he sure was confused by his two coach's reactions.
It's life, and it's not easy to react all the time with the right reactions. If I was the master judge; I would have given a medal Bronze to both young wrestlers.
But I guess they don't have that stuff written...yet, in their Olympic books.
The rules are something clear, but here the circumstance was very unusual and both kids are good kids, but their coaches, from both wrestlers, need to learn the art of control and diplomacy. I think. So it was a coach moment, and the kids pay the price for their coach's behavior, even the winner because his coach too was embarrassing before; him too jumped in the ring few times and was told to step out by the referee. And points are deducted from the athletes when their coach are disobeying the rules.
It's tricky too because sometimes a contest will change it, and other times it will work in the other team's favor. And no contest @ all means no fair point on occasions were the judges missed a simply little move that could have make all the difference.
Yes, both kids deserve a medal, but all the coaches from the two sides should have been banned and send back home in the next plane.
If I was a judge, that's my way.
I hope many learned something here; that more important than winning a medal is our true self, how we behave.
The two young wrestlers were ok...perhaps the young Mongolian was celebrating too quick...but the rules in the time I am no expert, and dancing is not wrong when you fight. It's his two coaches who should have wait few more seconds (5) before jumping too quickly...then the Mongolian would have win.
So, all in all they were stripping in protest of their own uncontrollable behavior. And that, is the true ironic reality. They have only themselves to blame, and they have a huge debt towards their own young athlete.
This is high drama, this stuff happened in Rio. A good opportunity to reflect on human nature...we're all good people @ the games. ...Almost all.
P.S. I know that I am not 100% correct on what I just described...and I bet all the judges don't always agree among themselves. The entire episode, for all the time that it lasted, had everyone uncertain of the fairest outcome. Not a single person, judge, referee, control officers, Olympic cops, ...no one had the ultimate control on something like that. ...And justifiably so...in my book.