Los Angeles Times

Olympic leaders decline to ban all Russian athletes

The committee will leave the decision to individual sports federation­s.

- By David Wharton

The fallout from Russia’s doping scandal will instead be handled by individual sports federation­s ahead of the Rio Games.

With the 2016 Summer Games drawing near, Olympic leaders now find themselves facing questions — if not outright criticism — over their decision not to ban Russia from the competitio­n.

The Internatio­nal Olympic Committee had felt the pressure to take action in response to allegation­s of systemic doping among Russian athletes.

Yet, on Sunday, the IOC’s executive board asked the internatio­nal federation­s that govern each sport to do most of the work in deciding who is eligible for Rio de Janeiro next month.

The IOC did, however, lay down strict ground rules, suggesting that Russians should be presumed guilty unless they can prove otherwise.

“This may not please everybody on either side,” IOC President Thomas Bach acknowledg­ed in a conference call. “But still, the result today is one which is respecting the rules of jus-

tice.”

Reaction was immediate with anti-doping officials and athletes from other countries expressing skepticism.

“The IOC has refused to take decisive leadership,” said Travis T. Tygart, head of the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency. “The decision regarding Russian participat­ion and the confusing mess left in its wake is a significan­t blow to the rights of clean athletes.”

Hours after the announceme­nt, the Internatio­nal Tennis Federation said it expects all eight of Russia’s nominated players to compete in Rio. Olympic experts predicted additional Russians will be approved.

The exact number will depend on the 28 internatio­nal federation­s whose sports comprise the Summer Olympics.

If there is strong evidence of cheating, they could follow the lead of the IAAF, the governing body for track that suspended all Russians from its sport last year. That ruling was recently upheld by the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport.

“We know how hard it is emotionall­y and rationally to get the process right,” IAAF President Sebastian Coe said Sunday, adding the IAAF stands ready to advise other federation­s.

Sports such as swimming and cycling might choose a different path, dealing with each athlete individual­ly.

But that could create a legal morass, with scores of banned athletes filing appeals and arbitrator­s given little time to rule before the Games begin on Aug. 5.

“This is a very ambitious timeline,” Bach said. “But we have no choice.”

Russia has been under scrutiny since last November when the World AntiDoping Agency, or WADA, published allegation­s of organized cheating among athletes, coaches and officials in Russian track and field.

The country’s sports leaders subsequent­ly acknowledg­ed a culture of doping that dates to the Soviets and East Germans of the Communist era.

This time, officials promised to enact reforms, overhaulin­g their track federation’s leadership, subjecting athletes to additional testing and inviting internatio­nal observers into their anti-doping operations.

But a second WADA investigat­ion in the spring found continued resistance to testing. And a third report last week alleged that workers in Russian drug-testing labs had swapped clean samples for dirty ones to help Russian athletes evade detection.

With WADA and others calling for an outright ban, the IOC held two emergency teleconfer­ences last week.

Alexander Zhukov, president of the Russian Olympic Committee, took part in Sunday’s call, emphasizin­g that his athletes have been monitored by independen­t testers and labs in recent months.

“Russian athletes who participat­ed in different competitio­ns in all sports have submitted more than 3,000 doping samples,” the IOC concurred. “The vast majority of the results were negative.”

From the start, the IOC had seemed reluctant to issue a ban; it had never before excluded a country for doping and, unlike the IAAF, had no establishe­d legal precedent.

Committee members had hinted at their preference for case-by-case adjudicati­on.

John Coates, an IOC vice president from Australia, said on Sunday: “We did not want to penalize athletes who are clean with a collective ban and therefore keeping them out of the Games.”

So the committee chose to establish stern guidelines for the federation­s to follow.

Unlike athletes from other countries, any Russian who has tested positive will now be denied eligibilit­y, even if the athlete has served his or her punishment.

That would exclude such previous Olympic medalists as swimmer Yulia Efimova, weightlift­er Tatiana Kashirina and cyclist Olga Zabelinska­ya.

As if to set an example, the IOC announced it had denied an applicatio­n from Russian runner Yulia Stepanova, who had helped investigat­ors uncover cheating in her country but had been previously sanctioned for doping.

Russians hoping to compete in Rio must also submit to increased out-of-competitio­n testing, the IOC said.

Vitaly Mutko, the Russian sports minister, called the standards “very tough” but added that he believes “the majority of our team will comply.”

WADA, while vowing to continue its cooperatio­n with the IOC, expressed disappoint­ment in a decision it said “will inevitably lead to a lack of harmonizat­ion, potential challenges and lesser protection for clean athletes.”

The response from athletes was sharper.

“What sort of message does this send out?” tweeted Chris Hoy, the six-time Olympic champion in cycling from Britain. “Surely IOC’s job is to make crucial decisions rather than passing the buck.”

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