Arab Times

Icarus goes inside Russia Oly scandal

Fogel looks into drugs in sport

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LOS ANGELES, July 27, (AFP): When documentar­y filmmaker Bryan Fogel began looking into drugs in sport, he envisaged pulling off a bold stunt to show how easy it was to cheat anti-doping tests.

Little did he know he would end up making a geopolitic­al thriller about Russian doping involving dirty urine, a troubling death and the biggest scandal in sporting history.

Due for release on Netflix next Friday, Fogel’s “Icarus” shows how Russia corrupted the 2012 Olympics in London and 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, told through the eyes of the man who mastermind­ed the fraud before defecting and turning FBI informant.

It started out as a simple plan to recreate disgraced cyclist Lance Armstrong’s blood doping regime and document exactly how easy it was to sail through the tests that ought to have caught the American.

“The theory was, if this guy has been able to do this, what has changed in the last four years since his confession and, more importantl­y, what does this mean for all sport?” Fogel told AFP.

He aimed to illustrate flaws in the system by using roughly the same blood-doping regime as Armstrong and getting an expert to coach him through evading detection during his post-race urine tests.

He ended up being introduced to Russian doctor Grigory Rodchenkov, who oversaw all drug testing for the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics in Moscow’s World Anti-doping Agency (WADA) lab and, astonishin­gly, was only too happy to help.

Fogel spent six months being coached by the charismati­c, maverick Rodchenkov into taking a variety of substances including human growth hormone EPO, as the pair talked over Skype and met in Los Angeles and Moscow.

Then, on Nov 9, 2015, WADA accused Rodchenkov in a 335-page report after an 11-month investigat­ion of being the mastermind behind Russia’s massive, state-run doping efforts.

The internatio­nal furor forced President Vladimir Putin into making emphatic denials of state involvemen­t on national television and promising “personaliz­ed and absolute” punishment for any individual­s found culpable.

Plotting

Over the next five days Rodchenkov was forced to resign, had his lab shut down and had agents from the Federal Security Service (FSB) — formerly the KGB — moved into his home. Contacts told him the intelligen­ce services were plotting his “suicide.”

Fearing for his life, Rodchenkov escaped to the United States after Fogel bought him a plane ticket.

The scientist arrived at Fogel’s home in Los Angeles with a hard drive containing documents proving that statespons­ored doping had been going on for decades, not just in track and field but across a spectrum of Russian sports.

His evidence outlined how Rodchenkov had developed cutting-edge chemistry and, in Sochi, overseen an FSB operation to swap out contaminat­ed urine for clean samples.

Rodchenkov tells Fogel on camera that 30 of Russia’s 73 medals in Beijing 2008 were aided by doping, as well as at least half of the 81 medals won in London 2012.

In February last year, Rodchenkov’s close friend, former anti-doping agency chief Nikita Kamaev, died suddenly of what Russian authoritie­s called a “massive heart attack,” as he was planning a book with Sunday Times journalist David Walsh on doping in sport.

Rodchenkov says his friend — the only other non-government official in the world who knew about the doping scandal — had never suffered heart problems.

“It was incredibly frightenin­g. You realize that this changes all of Olympic history, this is a spectacula­r scandal. They cheated their $50 billion Olympics and won 32 medals, and defrauded the world,” Fogel said.

In May 2016 Fogel presented a spreadshee­t to a meeting of leading global anti-doping officials naming every single athlete on Russia’s programme and what they were taking in London — and revealed he had the same for the 2008 Beijing Games.

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