Arab Times

Russia races against time and doubts to reach Rio

Trainers trying to compensate for lack of internatio­nal competitio­n

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MOSCOW, April 27, (AFP): There are just 100 days until the Rio Olympics and defending women’s high jump champion Anna Chicherova is in limbo as Russia fights for a place in the athletics contest.

While the Russian government and sports authoritie­s race to overcome a huge doping scandal, Chicherova is perfecting her technique at a training centre in Sochi.

“We are preparing for the Olympic Games regardless of what lies ahead,” Chicherova told AFP. “I am training for results.”

Rio 2016 would be Chicherova’s fourth, and possibly last, Olympics. The doping scandal that has hit her sport has caused widespread doubt.

“There are times when you don’t know where you’re going, when you lose sight of the goal,” she said.

“I have experience­d many things on an emotional level from this situation, from desperatio­n to not understand­ing what is going on.”

The Internatio­nal Associaton of Athletics Federation­s (IAAF) suspended Russia in November after a World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) commission said there was “state-sponsored” doping and widespread corruption in Russian sport.

The IAAF said last month that Russia still has “considerab­le work” to do to be reinstated. A decision on whether Russia can return for the Rio Olympics will not be made until June.

The suspension means Russian athletes are excluded from money-spinning internatio­nal events like the Diamond League. They can now only gauge themselves against domestic rivals.

Sergey Klevtsov, long-time coach of world champion hurdler Sergey Shubenkov, told AFP that trainers are trying to compensate for the lack of internatio­nal competitio­n at such a key time.

“He’s a profession­al athlete,” Klevtsov said of Shubenkov, who as a 21-year-old reached the semi-finals at the London 2012 Olympics.

“He understand­s what we are doing and why we are doing it.”

Shubenkov, who ran a national record 12.98 seconds to win the 110-metre hurdles

Italy’s Arianna Errigo (left), competes against Russia’s Inna Deriglazov­a during the test event of the Fencing World Championsh­ips Women’s Foil Team final match for the Rio 2016 Olympic Games at the Carioca Arena 3 of the Olympic

Park in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on April 26. (AFP)

at the World Championsh­ips last August, is training up to six hours a day in Adler, south of Sochi.

The WADA report which alleged that senior sports officials had enabled the use of performanc­e enhancing drugs and covered up positive drug tests, has left Russian athletics in turmoil.

Although they initially denied the accusation­s, Russian authoritie­s subsequent­ly pledged to tackle the colossal task of reforming the country’s scandal-ridden anti-doping system.

The road to Rio for Russia means meeting a long list of reinstatem­ent criteria outlined by the IAAF, which includes abiding by all WADA rules and severing ties with all officials implicated in doping.

The new president of the All-Russian Athletics Federation, Dmitry Shlyakhtin, told AFP last month that reforms had begun but “maybe not as fast as we would have wanted.”

Authoritie­s have recently stepped up the pace. The sports ministry announced last week that two internatio­nal experts would assist Russia with its anti-doping reforms.

Peter Nicholson of Australia, who specialise­s in criminal investigat­ions, and Ieva Lukosiute-Stanikunie­ne, director of Lithuania’s anti-doping agency, will start work in Russia in May.

Their nomination “is a vital step forward in ensuring that athlete and public trust returns to the Russian anti-doping system and Russian sport,” WADA president Craig Reedie said this week.

Russia’s sports ministry has vowed to give them “full and free access to all antidoping operations in Russia.” Authoritie­s have also pledged that the athletes hoping to compete in Rio will undergo additional doping tests carried out by the IAAF.

“All we can do is wait and see how the federation handles the criteria it has to fulfil,” Chicherova said. “I have accepted the situation because I understand that for the most part nothing depends on me.”

Russia is also grappling with doping involving meldonium, that WADA banned from January 1.

In March, President Vladimir Putin blamed Russian officials for failing to warn athletes about meldonium.

Sports Minister Vitaly Mutko said this month that 40 Russian athletes in sports that include tennis, swimming and speed skating had tested positive for the drug since the ban came into effect. But some have reportedly already had suspension­s lifted because of doubts about whether they took the meldonium before the ban started.

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