Windsor Star

WADA puts shadow on Russia’s hopes for Winter Olympics

Refuses to reinstate Moscow affiliate over Kremlin’s denials on Sochi doping

- JOHN DUERDEN

The World Anti-Doping Agency placed Russia’s fate for the upcoming Winter Olympics on perilous ground, refusing to reinstate the country’s suspended anti-doping operation while Russia remained insistent the government is not to blame.

At its meeting Thursday in South Korea, WADA handed Russia the equivalent of a failing grade, saying two key requiremen­ts for reinstatin­g the Russian Anti-Doping Agency had not been fulfilled:

—Russia must publicly accept results of an investigat­ion by Canada’s Richard McLaren that concluded the country ran a statespons­ored doping program.

—Russia must allow access to urine samples collected during the time of the cheating.

“We can’t walk away from the commitment­s,” said Craig Reedie, the chairman of WADA and also a member of the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee, which will ultimately decide Russia’s fate.

Reedie refused to be drawn on what impact Thursday’s decision might have on the IOC. “We do not have the right to decide who takes part in internatio­nal competitio­n,” he said. “I am quite certain that the IOC would prefer that RUSADA was compliant.”

The IOC said its executive board, due to meet Dec. 5-7, “will take all the circumstan­ces, including all the measures to ensure a level playing field at the Olympic Winter Games 2018, into considerat­ion when it decides on the participat­ion of the Russian athletes.”

Among those circumstan­ces will be Russia’s continued denial that a state-sponsored program existed.

Leaders in the country have depicted the doping program that marred the 2014 Games in Sochi as the work of individual­s, not the government. Alexander Zhukov, the president of the Russian Olympic Committee and also a member of the IOC, doubled down on that Thursday, telling WADA members that “We absolutely deny the existence of a state-sponsored doping system.”

“It is clear that an unconditio­nal recognitio­n of the McLaren Report is impossible,” Zhukov said. “Such a requiremen­t cannot, and should not, serve as an obstacle to the full compliance of RUSADA.”

The Kremlin also repeated the denial of any government backing for dopers.

“WADA’s decision was unpleasant news. We disagree with this decision and consider it unfair,” said Dmitry Peskov, a spokesman for Russian President Vladimir Putin. “We intend to continue contacts with the internatio­nal sports community and organizati­ons to defend Russia’s positions. We are preparing for the Olympics.”

Meanwhile, the honorary president of the Russian Olympic Committee, Leonid Tyagachev, told Govorit Moskva radio that the key whistleblo­wer on the Sochi scandal, former Moscow lab director Grigory Rodchenkov “simply needs to be shot for his untruths.”

“If we are insulted undeserved­ly, then we don’t (want) those kinds of Olympics and that kind of relationsh­ip,” said Tyagachev, who no longer wields decision-making power in the Russian Olympic hierarchy. “We will not kneel.”

USADA chief executive Travis Tygart described the latest developmen­t as “another sad moment in this entire sordid affair.”

“There was really no other outcome, based on their unwillingn­ess to admit what the flood of evidence proves,” Tygart said. “Now clean athletes are watching anxiously to see if the IOC similarly will take action to finally stand up for their rights or not.”

Before last year’s Games in Rio, WADA recommende­d a complete ban of the Russian team but the IOC refused, instead allowing individual sports federation­s to determine eligibilit­y of the athletes.

In the case of the Winter Games, the IOC has already vacated results of six Russian athletes from the Sochi Olympics and banned them from next year’s Games, with several more cases still to be decided.

In discussing Thursday’s decision, WADA director general Olivier Niggli said the conditions of reinstatem­ent have been exchanged with RUSADA “over 25 times in the last 18 months,” and were still not completely fulfilled

Though it’s not fully reinstated, RUSADA has made improvemen­ts that allow it to collect samples from athletes, though there have been reports that the agency isn’t testing the most relevant athletes.

In Moscow, RUSADA head Yuri Ganus said his agency had reformed to WADA standards and was now “completely independen­t,” but that the key remaining demands were outside his authority. Ganus wouldn’t say if he personally accepts McLaren’s findings or if the Russian government should do so, though he called the report “a very serious document.”

Thursday’s WADA ruling could mean Russia misses a second Paralympic­s after being excluded from Rio.

 ?? PAVEL GOLOVKIN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? RUSADA head Yuri Ganus says his agency has reformed to WADA standards to be “completely independen­t,” but further demands are outside his authority.
PAVEL GOLOVKIN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS RUSADA head Yuri Ganus says his agency has reformed to WADA standards to be “completely independen­t,” but further demands are outside his authority.

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