Times of Oman

Three Russian cyclists sue WADA

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MOSCOW: Three Russian cyclists are suing the World AntiDoping Agency ( WADA) and investigat­or Richard McLaren over their exclusion from the Rio 2016 Olympics, their coach said on Tuesday.

The road cyclists were among the Russians banned from competing after a WADA-commission­ed report by Canadian lawyer McLaren, found evidence of widespread doping and manipulati­on of doping tests by Russian athletes and officials.

The cyclists - Kirill Sveshnikov, Dmitry Strakhov and Dmitry Sokolov - do not appear in the McLaren report, which said that 26 positive doping tests by Russian cyclists had been covered up.

However, to be able to compete in Rio, Russian athletes had to fulfil a series of criteria defined by the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee.

The IOC also called on internatio­nal sports federation­s, which ultimately ruled on athletes’ participat­ion in the Games, to examine the McLaren report and “carry out an individual analysis of each athlete’s anti-doping record”.

The Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport (CAS) last year dismissed the three cyclists’ appeal against the ban.

“The main task is to prove that the guys are right, that they have never doped and that they were unfairly banned from taking part in the Olympic Games,” their coach Alexander Kuznetsov said.

He said the lawsuit’s objective was to “clear the athletes’ names”.

“We are convinced that the result should be in our favour.”

In a letter to the Internatio­nal Cycling Union (UCI) in August last year, the IOC said the three cyclists “do not meet the criteria set by the IOC Executive Board” to compete in Rio, according to the CAS ruling on their case.

The IOC said that “nobody implicated” in the McLaren report could be accepted for entry or accredited for the Games, among other criteria. Kuznetsov said the lawsuit was filed on Monday by Russian lawyers working in Canada, where WADA has its headquarte­rs, but could not confirm to which court.

“As this is a pending case, we are unable to comment at this time,” WADA spokeswoma­n Maggie Durand said.

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