Windsor Star

Moscow confident majority of athletes will compete in Rio

- JAMES ELLINGWORT­H

MOSCOW Russia is confident that most of its Olympic team will be able to compete in Rio de Janeiro, but its efforts to reinstate banned athletes are a mixed bag.

Sports minister Vitaly Mutko on Friday told local media that 272 of the country’s athletes had been approved by internatio­nal sports federation­s out of an original team of 387, adding that the number could rise.

More than 100 Russian athletes have been excluded by sports federation­s, including a blanket ban on the track and field team and more than 30 rejected under new Internatio­nal Olympic Committee rules.

After the World Anti-Doping Agency accused the Russian government of directing a vast doping coverup, the IOC said it would not allow Russians to compete in Rio if they had previously been banned for doping, were implicated in the alleged coverup or had not been tested often enough internatio­nally. Most federation­s have not excluded Russians on the basis of a lack of testing, but rowing is the exception, having barred 19 Russians, most for insufficie­nt tests. Testing in Russia does not count under IOC rules because of the repeated allegation­s made against Russia’s drug testing agency and national lab, both of which have been suspended.

An appeal is being prepared against World Rowing ’s decision at the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport, Russian Rowing Federation head Veniamin But told The Associated Press. That could potentiall­y send the 19 to Rio days before the games start, if the case is heard and approved in time.

“They’re now in Portugal,” But said. “They’re training and they’re ready to go.”

World Rowing’s approval process left just six rowers eligible to compete for Rio, meaning Russia could only compete in one event, the men’s four, and meant reserve crews from around the world have rushed to Brazil to compete.

There was good news for Russia on Friday when the Russian Taekwondo Union said it had received notificati­on from the World Taekwondo Federation that all three of its entries could compete in Rio.

However, Russia’s best-known track and field athlete, two-time Olympic gold medallist Yelena Isinbayeva, said she had been refused in her last attempt to make the team for Rio following the blanket ban on Russia in that sport.

Isinbayeva had applied again for an individual exemption but was refused by the IAAF, track’s world governing body.

“Unfortunat­ely they didn’t make an exception for me,” she wrote on Instagram. “They didn’t admit me for the Olympics in Rio. The miracle didn’t happen.”

 ?? ALEXANDER ZEMLIANICH­ENKO/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Two-time Olympic gold medallist Yelena Isinbayeva, Russia’s best-known track and field athlete, had her last-ditch bid to attend the Rio Olympics quashed.
ALEXANDER ZEMLIANICH­ENKO/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Two-time Olympic gold medallist Yelena Isinbayeva, Russia’s best-known track and field athlete, had her last-ditch bid to attend the Rio Olympics quashed.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada