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Norwegian beach handball team fined for choosing shorts over bikini bottoms

In this March 30, 2020, file photo, a man jogs past the Olympic rings in Tokyo. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong, File) In this March 30, 2020, file photo, a man jogs past the Olympic rings in Tokyo. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong, File)
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The Norwegian women's beach handball team has been fined after players opted to wear shorts instead of bikini bottoms during a European championship game.

The European Handball Federation (EHF) said Monday that it had imposed a fine of 1,500 euros ($1,766) -- 150 euros ($176) for each player -- on the team for "improper clothing" in the bronze medal game against Spain on Sunday.

The team's decision to wear shorts did not comply with the uniform regulations "defined in the IHF Beach Handball Rules of the Game" the EFH said in a statement.

According to International Handball Federation (IHF) regulations, female athletes must wear bikini bottoms with a side width a maximum of 10 centimeters (3.9 inches), with a "close fit" and "cut on an upward angle toward the top of the leg."

Meanwhile, men must wear shorts that are "not too baggy" and 10 centimeters above the kneecap.

The team's coach Eskil Berg Andreassen told CNN Tuesday that the uniform regulations could discourage women from playing the sport.

He said the team knew there would be a fine because they had been fighting for the right to wear alternatives to bikini bottoms for "several years."

Andreassen said the uniform regulations were a "difficult thing for many players," adding: "Maybe they will move away from the sport, and choose another sport."

Andreassen said that the Norwegian team want women to be able to have a choice of what they wear.

"It should be possible to choose -- not to say that they have to play like this. If someone wants to play in bikini bottoms, they have the right to choose," he said.

He also warned that the IHF's uniform regulations could be discouraging women who do not want to wear bikini briefs, including those from majority Muslim countries.

"We also have to take a decision about Arabic girls -- how we can get more Arabic girls involved in these types of sport."

Andreassen said uniforms that cover "most of the body" should also be allowed to attract women, not just in beach handball but in other sports like soccer.

"We see in beach handball that girls from Arabic countries do quite well -- Oman, Kuwait... also Pakistan. But we never see an Arabic women's team, they're not playing beach handball," he said.

'ENOUGH IS ENOUGH'

The Norwegian Handball Association (NHF) said on Twitter on Tuesday: "We are very proud of these girls who during the European Championships raised their voices and announced that ENOUGH IS ENOUGH."

"We at NHF stand behind and support you. Together we will continue to fight to change the clothing regulations, so that players are allowed to play in the clothes they are comfortable with," the NHF added.

In a joint statement issued Tuesday, the IHF and EHF said they "are committed to popularising beach handball. All contributions in that respect and measures that will support the ambitions of this attractive sport are supported."

The federations said the topic of female uniforms had already been discussed at the EHF Congress in April 2021, and the matter would be dealt with by the newly elected Beach Handball Commission in August.

CNN has contacted the EHF and IHF for further comment.

Elite female athletes' clothing has come under scrutiny recently.

On Sunday, double Paralympic world champion Olivia Breen revealed that she was left "speechless" when an official at the English Championships told the double Paralympic world champion that her sprint briefs were "too short and inappropriate."

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