The Star (Jamaica)

Mutko defiant about Olympic scandal

- MOSCOW (AP):

In a combative mood hours before the World Cup draw, Russian Deputy Prime Minister Vitaly Mutko defended himself and his country amid an ongoing Olympic doping scandal.

Mutko aimed barbs at the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee (IOC) and internatio­nal media, and singled out other countries’ doping issues, in a 77-minute news conference at the State Kremlin Palace.

Answers lasting more than 10 minutes left FIFA President Gianni Infantino a spectator sitting beside Mutko at a media event that often ignored the pending draw in the same venue. They also sat together during the ceremony.

“If you don’t fight back, you will just be smashed,” said Mutko, the head of the World Cup Organising Committee who has been implicated in a state-orchestrat­ed doping program at the 2014 Sochi Olympics.

“Nowadays everyone is trying to make some kind of axis of evil out of us, just because we’re a great sporting power,” Mutko said, four days before the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee executive board meets in Switzerlan­d to weigh banning Russia from the upcoming Pyeongchan­g Olympics.

Mutko once more insisted “there is no proof” of a statebacke­d doping system, despite an IOC judging panel this week detailing why it believed organised cheating did corrupt the 2014 Sochi Games.

The IOC panel said Monday it believed 2014-dated entries in a diary kept by a Russian whistleblo­wer were “significan­t” evidence. In diary extracts published Tuesday by the New York Times, the former director of Russia’s antidoping laboratori­es directly implicated Mutko in a conspiracy.

Asked if the IOC’s decision on Tuesday could affect the World Cup, Infantino said he was “very relaxed” about the outcome.

“The answer is simple, it will have no impact,” the FIFA president said. “We are speaking here about the World Cup, not the Olympic Games.”

Still, the IOC board previously banned Mutko in July 2016 from the Rio de Janeiro Games when he was the country’s sports minister.

“The IOC is a social organisati­on. It cannot dictate to a government which staff to appoint,” Mutko said yesterday, defending his position as head of the World Cup.

Mutko was later asked if he felt embarrasse­d that a news conference to showcase Russia hosting the soccer World Cup kept returning to an Olympic doping scandal.

“I shouldn’t be ashamed about anything,” he said. “We are a good partner of the world sports movement. I don’t understand why you have to trample Russia underfoot.”

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