The Phnom Penh Post

Doping hangs over 2018 Games before they begin

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THE casual viewer of the Pyeongchan­g Olympics could be forgiven for wondering just how many athletes are doped after a raft of recent revelation­s in winter sports, despite “every effort” to crack down.

Endurance sports such as crosscount­ry skiing and biathlon have come under the most scrutiny, but – much like the Summer Olympics – no discipline has been completely unscathed in the build-up to the Games, which open today.

Russian athletes deemed “clean” will compete under a neutral flag after their country was banned for a wellorches­trated drugs cheating system four years ago that allegedly had links all the way to the Kremlin.

Speaking on the eve of the Games in South Korea, World Anti-Doping Agency President Craig Reedie attempted to assuage the concerns of athletes who fear their rivals could dope their way to gold.

There had been “very substantia­l” testing ahead of the Games, he said, adding: “I hope [that] will give the athletes comfort that they are in a fair and honest competitio­n.

“Every effort has been made to provide a proper playing field for the athletes and I hope, more than anything else, that at the end of the Games that is what it will be.”

But recent Winter Games reveal grounds for scepticism. Ahead of the Olympics, British newspaper the Sunday Times and German broadcaste­r ARD said they had been passed a database showing that more than 50 cross-country skiers set to compete in South Korea returned abnormal readings between 2001 and 2010.

Following Salt Lake City in 2002, the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee increased its scrutiny after Spain’s Johann Muehlegg and four others were caught doping and stripped of their medals.

At the 2006 Turin Games, doping products were discovered in a chalet used by a coach involved with Austria’s cross-country skiing team. He fled the Games but was caught at a police roadblock.

However, doping at the Winter Olympics reached its nadir with the Russian plot four years ago in Sochi.

The 2014 Games, hosted at enormous cost by Russia in the Black Sea resort, marked a new low with allegation­s of state-sponsored doping and the mass switching of test samples in favour of Russians.

Cocktail of steroids

The former director of the Moscow anti-doping lab Grigory Rodchenkov – now in exile, fearing for his life and cooperatin­g with investigat­ors – admitted he fine-tuned a musclebuil­ding cocktail of steroids to ensure Russian competitor­s won medals on home soil.

Russia has always denied accusation­s it mounted a system of statespons­ored doping and has accused Rodchenkov of acting alone.

WADA commission­ed Canadian professor Richard McLaren to com- pile a report that focused suspicion on hundreds of athletes, with skating, ice hockey, biathlon and even curling on a long list of winter and summer Olympic sports under scrutiny.

Endurance athletes in Pyeongchan­g will be heavily tested for the endurance booster EPO, and anti-doping officials fear that athletes have taken to using tiny, so-called “micro” doses to avoid detection. In response, testers will be taking ever more frequent samples.

“EPO micro-doses disappear quickly so doses are taken almost every day in the hope of escaping testers,” said Xavier Bigard, of France’s national anti-doping agency.

He also warned that the doses were likely to be taken out of competitio­n to aid training and recuperati­on.

Anabolic steroid use is also under the microscope.

“One positive test in two is for anabolics and these offences happen in a wide field of discipline­s,” Bigard add- ed. “EPO and anabolics can be used together to get both endurance and power. A cheat would be well advised to use both.”

In bobsleigh or speed skating, power is especially important.

Chinese speed skater Shi Xiaoxuan was banned from Pyeongchan­g after testing positive for clenbutero­l, an endurance-boosting substance.

Chris Creveling of the US, a silver medallist in the 5,000m speed skating relay at Sochi, has been barred for a positive test for clomifene, as has Canadian bobsleighe­r Jonathan Francis.

“It’s a substance that helps bring other anabolics to their full potential, a kind of booster,” Bigard explained.

According to WADA data, ice hockey has produced by far the most positive tests, while alpine skiing emerges almost as white as snow.

But fans would be forgiven if they no longer believed in winter sports’ Snow White fairytale.

 ??  ?? American speed skater Chris Creveling, a silver medallist in the 5,000m speed skating relay at Sochi, has been banned from the 2018 Pyeonchang Winter Games after a positive test for clomifene.
American speed skater Chris Creveling, a silver medallist in the 5,000m speed skating relay at Sochi, has been banned from the 2018 Pyeonchang Winter Games after a positive test for clomifene.

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