Malta Independent

Doping charge could hurt Russia’s chance at reinstatem­ent

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Russia could lose its chance to be reinstated before the end of the Winter Olympics because of a doping charge against curling bronze medallist Alexander Krushelnit­sky.

The Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport said in a statement yesterday that it has “initiated a procedure involving” Krushelnit­sky, who finished third in mixed doubles with his wife, Anastasia Bryzgalova.

Russian officials said he tested positive for meldonium, which was banned in 2016, and has left the Olympic village. No date has been set for a hearing.

IOC spokesman Mark Adams says a failed doping test could keep Russia’s banned team from marching under the national flag at the closing ceremony.

Russian athletes are participat­ing in the Pyeongchan­g Olympics as “Olympic Athletes from Russia.” The IOC suspended the Russian Olympic committee last year in connection with a massive doping scheme at the 2014 Olympics in host South Koreans.

“Pierre is actually the guy who taught me how to drive a bobsled,” said Kripps, who was born in Hawaii, calls Canada home and also holds an Australian passport. “It was pretty cool that he was here to see it.”

Latvia got bronze, with Oskars Melbardis and Janis Strenga finishing 0.05 seconds back to complete the closest three-sled finish in Olympic history. And afterward, Kripps, Friedrich and Melbardis all not only had similar times - but similar thoughts. “It’s crazy,” Kripps said. “It was crazy,” Friedrich said. “Crazy, crazy, crazy, crazy,” Melbardis said.

Perhaps even more unbelievab­ly, it was the third time a two-man competitio­n ended in a tie. The other was in 1968, when Italy got the gold over West Germany even though they finished with the Sochi but allowed 168 athletes to compete under neutral uniforms and without the Russian national flag.

Adams confirmed the positive test and says it could have “consequenc­es” in evaluating the behavior the Russian team, which was required to abide by restrictio­ns including bans to some medal favorites - and to undergo extra drug tests.

“If confirmed this will be taken into account along with many other factors” regarding Russian behaviour,” Adams said.

Russian Curling Federation president Dmitry Svishchev told The Associated Press that Krushelnit­sky tested clean as recently as January 22, the day before he flew to a pre-Olympic training camp in Japan.

Svishchev said it was possible someone spiked Krushelnit­sky’s food or drink. He suggested that rival Russian athletes or Russia’s political enemies could be responsibl­e. same time. Italy got the win that year because of a tiebreaker that’s no longer in use, with the edge going to the sled with the fastest heat.

Nico Walther and Christian Poser of Germany, the leaders after Sunday’s first two runs, were fourth only 0.20 seconds back. Johannes Lochner and Christophe­r Weber, also from Germany, were fifth in 3:17.14.

“This is what makes the sport amazing,” US bobsledder Nick Cunningham said. “Anyone can win on any given day.”

Or on this day, two different anyones.

“It’s really special that we managed to come out on top and tie with such a good team,” Kripps said. “We pushed hard from the first heat to the last and in general I thought we executed better as we went ... and we needed every bit of it, too.”

“It can’t happen at the Olympic Village because everyone eats the same canteen food,” he said. “It could happen at training camp or in the intervenin­g period . ... There’s a possibilit­y of it being something within the team, that something happened during training camp, or as a political means to achieve some goal.”

The curling team trained in Japan in January, bringing in some Russian athletes who had not qualified for the Olympics as practice partners.

The federation senior vice-president Andrei Sozin confirmed to the AP that Krushelnit­sky tested positive for meldonium, a substance which was banned in sport in 2016.

“Alexander has left the Olympic village and given up his accreditat­ion,” Sozin said. “We have informatio­n from our sources that the substance found was meldonium, which has not been used by Russian athletes and teams since 2015.”

Meldonium is the substance that Russian tennis star Maria Sharapova was suspended for after testing positive at the Australian Open in 2016. Before it was banned, many Russian athletes used the drug, which is designed for people with heart problems and some believe can help athletes increase stamina.

Krushelnit­sky’s “A sample” tested positive. Adams said a second sample would be tested, and results could be announced within 24 hours.

The Norwegian team finished fourth, and could get the bronze if the positive test is confirmed.

Adams says Russians at the games have undergone “rigorous testing” and adds that “Russians were tested to a significan­t level more than others.”

The case was the talk of the rink at curling.

Russian women’s curling coach Sergei Belanov said he didn’t believe that a young and “clever man” would dope. “It’s stupid. But Aleksandr is not stupid, so I don’t believe it.”

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