The Malta Independent on Sunday

Spotlight on Russia Russia’s doping capital gears up for World Cup

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Nestled on the edge of the forest outside the Russian city of Saransk is the home of one of the most successful doping programs in history.

Athletes from the V.M. Chegin Olympic Training Center dominated race-walking for over a decade, winning nine Olympic and 18 world championsh­ip medals between 2004 and 2016, when head coach Viktor Chegin was banned for life amid a blizzard of doping cases.

Now Saransk — like Russia itself — wants to rebuild its reputation by hosting World Cup football games.

Instead of housing athletes juiced with blood-booster EPO or the toxic experiment­al drug GW1516, the center, which has been renamed but still sports a large set of Olympic rings, will be home to the Panama national football team. Ahead of Panama’s arrival, a new pitch is being installed and security is tight.

With political fallout going all the way to the Kremlin, doping scandals have threatened to overshadow Saransk and Russia’s World Cup preparatio­ns.

Russia was banned from February’s Winter Olympics over past doping offenses, and its athletes competed as neutrals — with two disqualifi­ed for failed drug tests.

In Saransk, government officials hope the World Cup erases memories of doping scandals.

“That ended two years ago. (Chegin) left his job and he doesn’t work for us. We don’t even know where he is,” regional sports minister Vladimir Kireyev said while visiting the center earlier this month. “The whole region is living for its preparatio­n for the World Cup, and we don’t have time for such things.”

However, the Russian AntiDoping Agency says it has proof top athletes from the region, including a world championsh­ip silver medalist, traveled to Kyrgyzstan last month to train with Chegin. Five were excluded from the world team championsh­ips over the case.

The agency’s head Yuri Ganus alleged to state news agency Tass last week that Kireyev threatened an anti-doping executive and that his ministry oversaw “the absence of effective anti-doping measures.” Kireyev’s office said Monday he’d only comment on those allegation­s after the World Cup.

Russia’s doping turmoil has extended into the world of football.

FIFA investigat­ed the Russian national team defender Ruslan Kambolov this year after evidence he could have benefited from a program of covering up failed drug tests. Kambolov’s lawyers have said the investigat­ion was dropped for lack of evidence, though FIFA hasn’t confirmed that.

Kambolov was named May 11 to Russia’s World Cup squad, but removed three days later after the team said he injured his calf muscle.

A World Anti-Doping Agency investigat­ion in 2016 published evidence that Russian officials were prepared to cover for the country’s 2014 World Cup squad should its players test positive pre-tournament. However, there’s no indication any of them doped or that they knew of cover-up plans.

The WADA investigat­ion’s files also indicate players on the Russian under-19 and under-21 national teams tested positive and weren’t punished.

The Russian government was implicated when WADA alleged senior officials ordered a cover-up of drug tests around the 2014 Winter Olympics, which Russia hosted in Sochi. The Kremlin fiercely denies the allegation­s. The lab in Sochi where the cover-up allegedly took place is now a bar selling doping-themed cocktails near the city’s World Cup stadium.

President Vladimir Putin has branded WADA’s star witness, former Moscow lab director Grigory Rodchenkov, a “nutjob” manipulate­d by the United States. Rodchenkov is under witness protection in the U.S. after fleeing Russia and faces arrest if he returns home.

Russian law enforcemen­t claims Rodchenkov made up allegation­s of drug use at the Sochi Olympics, and instead accused him of tricking clean, innocent Russians into taking banned substances.

Russia’s shown little interest in investigat­ing possible doping in football.

Deputy Prime Minister Vitaly Mutko, who is also president of the Russian Football Union, said Friday that performanc­e-enhancing drugs don’t exist in football.

“All that can happen here is marijuana, narcotics, sniffing something,” he told Russian media. “I’m absolutely calm about our team over this. We have nothing to hide.” Mutko was banned from the Olympics for life in December as part of a package of doping sanctions against Russia.

In Saransk, many still see doped athletes as heroes who put the city on the map.

In the Chegin center’s heyday, crowds of gold medalists trained together each morning on the city streets, watched by admiring locals. Three banned Olympic medalists and Chegin were namechecke­d in some promotiona­l materials from Saransk’s World Cup organizers, which were removed from the FIFA website Monday after an inquiry by The Associated Press.

Saransk locals told the AP they take a cynical view of sport. Everyone dopes, and if you’re caught, you’re either unlucky or a victim of jealous rivals.

“Our athletes’ hegemony at the world and European championsh­ips was too big and the decision was made to remove them,” said Alexei Kulikov, who works at a hotel which will house FIFA officials for the World Cup. “Every athlete takes banned substances. Every-

 ??  ?? This photo taken on Thursday, May 17, 2018 shows a view of the Olympic Sports Center where Panama’s football team will live during the 2018 World Cup in Saransk, Russia. Russia is trying to wipe its sports reputation clean by hosting the World Cup...
This photo taken on Thursday, May 17, 2018 shows a view of the Olympic Sports Center where Panama’s football team will live during the 2018 World Cup in Saransk, Russia. Russia is trying to wipe its sports reputation clean by hosting the World Cup...
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 ??  ?? This photo taken on Thursday, May 17, 2018, shows an indoor football pitch at the Olympic Sports Center in Saransk, Russia. Russia is trying to wipe its sports reputation clean by hosting the World Cup after years of doping scandals. In the host city...
This photo taken on Thursday, May 17, 2018, shows an indoor football pitch at the Olympic Sports Center in Saransk, Russia. Russia is trying to wipe its sports reputation clean by hosting the World Cup after years of doping scandals. In the host city...

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