Heraskevych’s appeal to Cas asked for his ban to be overturned, to be able to wear the helmet and to complete the two skeleton runs he missed out on on Thursday under the supervision of Cas.
He said his disqualification was “disproportionate” and claimed other athletes had been able to express their grief during competition at the Games.
For example, American figure skater Maxim Naumov held up a photograph of his parents, who were killed last year in a plane crash in Washington DC, as he waited for his score to come in earlier this week.
But the IOC say Heraskevych has contravened the ‘athlete expression’ guidelines, external, which were drawn up in 2023 and are part of Olympic law, which state “focus at the Olympic Games must remain on athletes’ performances”.
The law states: “It is a fundamental principle that sport at the Olympic Games is neutral and must be separate from political, religious and any other type of interference.”
On Thursday, IOC spokesperson Mark Adams said that if the committee allowed athletes to wear kit commemorating those killed in war, it would open the Games up to exploitation.
But Heraskevych has accused the Milan-Cortina Games of acting as “Russian propaganda” while Ukraine president Volodymyr Zelensky, said, external the IOC are “playing into the hands of the Russian aggressor”.
Heraskevych, who was his nation’s flag bearer in the opening ceremony, has received support from his compatriots at the Games with Alpine skier Dmytro Shepiuk displayed a note reading “Ukrainian heroes with us” after competing while the Ukrainian mixed relay luge team took the knee and held their helmets aloft in a display of solidarity.
