The Asian Age

IOC reduces Russians quota

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Lausanne, Jan. 20: The number of Russian athletes eligible to take part at next month’s Winter Olympics in Pyeongchan­g has been reduced from a pool of 500 to 389, the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee said on Friday.

The IOC last month banned Russia from taking part at Pyeongchan­g over state- sponsored doping, but clean Russian competitor­s will be allowed to participat­e under strict conditions, and under a neutral flag.

“As of today, the original pre- registrati­on pool of 500 athletes has already been reduced by 111 by the panel,” the IOC said in a statement, following the recommenda­tion of an independen­t invitation review panel.

“For others in the remaining pool of athletes, pre- conditions such as further pre- Games tests and reanalysis from stored samples have been required,” it said.

“Only if these requiremen­ts are met can the athletes be considered for invitation.”

The IOC added that “more than 80 per cent of the athletes” in the pool did not take part at the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, where the level of doping reached its peak.

None of the 42 Russian athletes handed lifetime Olympic bans for doping at Sochi remain on the list, with 39 of them set for an appeals hearing at the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport next week in Geneva.

The panel also recommende­d 51 coaches and 10 medical staff cannot be invited to the Olympics which run from February 9 to 25.

“All our decisions were ● “As of today, the original pre- registrati­on pool of 500 athletes has already been reduced by 111 by the panel,” the IOC said in a statement, following the recommenda­tion of an independen­t invitation review panel.

● “For others in the remaining pool of athletes, pre- conditions such as further pre- Games tests and reanalysis from stored samples have been required,” it said.

taken by consensus of the panel for each individual athlete, all of which were reviewed anonymousl­y,” said chair panel and former French sports minister Valerie Fourneyron.

“It was not easy to put this list together, but we wanted to be absolutely sure that only clean athletes from Russia can be invited to participat­e in the Olympic Winter Games,” the panel added further.

The final list of Russian athletes invited to take part in South Korea will not be published until after a delegation registrati­on meeting in Pyeongchan­g on January 27.

Russia originally topped the medals table in Sochi before losing 13 of 33 medals after an independen­t report, commission­ed by the World Anti- Doping Agency, revealed evidence of widespread doping over several years.

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