Malta Independent

Suspension­s lifted for 4 Russian athletes in skeleton

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Four Russians have been allowed to resume competing in skeleton even though they are under investigat­ion for alleged doping rule breaches at the 2014 Winter Olympics, the Internatio­nal Bobsled and Skeleton Federation said.

The IBSF had issued provisiona­l suspension­s to the four, including Olympic gold medallist Alexander Tretyakov, on 30 December after the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee opened an investigat­ion into apparent tampering with drug test samples.

However, the IBSF said that a hearing on Tuesday found there is so far “not sufficient evidence” to justify provisiona­l suspension­s, which keep athletes out of competitio­n for the duration of a doping investigat­ion.

The IBSF’s doping hearing panel says its ruling doesn’t affect the ongoing IOC investigat­ion and “invites the IOC to share any outcome of its investigat­ion with the IBSF in order to potentiall­y reconsider the position of the athletes.”

For the first time, the IBSF has also identified the competitor­s involved. Besides Tretyakov, they are Elena Nikitina, Olga Potylitsin­a and Maria Orlova, who finished third, fifth and sixth respective­ly at the 2014 Olympics.

The accusation­s against them followed the publicatio­n of World Anti-Doping Agency investigat­or Richard McLaren’s report accusing Russia of operating a state-sponsored doping system in which top Russian athletes’ samples were secretly swapped for clean ones during the 2014 Olympics in the Russian city of Sochi.

All four of the skeleton racers under investigat­ion are now cleared to resume competing immediatel­y at World Cup events and next month’s world championsh­ips, which were moved from Sochi to Koenigsee in Germany after athletes from around the world protested the choice of Russia as host.

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