Los Angeles Times

Scandal leads to suspension

Trojan Swim Club temporaril­y bans internatio­nal athletes.

- By Nathan Fenno nathan.fenno@latimes.com Twitter: @nathanfenn­o

The high-profile Trojan Swim Club will suspend participat­ion by internatio­nal athletes after the Internatio­nal Swimming Federation barred two Russian swimmers who train with the USCbased group from competing in the Rio de Janeiro Olympics.

Dave Salo, coach of the Trojan Swim Club and USC’s men’s and women’s swimming teams, said in an email to The Times on Thursday that the suspension will last until “I can somehow find a way to assure we don’t have these kinds of problems.”

“Other than regular testing,” Salo said, “I don’t know what the answer is.”

Olympic medalists Nikita Lobinstev and Vladimir Morozov were among seven Russian swimmers banned from the Games this week as their country’s doping scandal continues.

Lobinstev and Morozov, who competed for the Trojan Swim Club at the Los Angeles Invitation­al this month, were named in a World Anti-Doping Agency investigat­ion headed by Canadian law professor Richard McLaren.

Salo expressed surprise at the bans, noting that the Russians have trained with the club for “the past several years” and have been subject to frequent random testing by WADA and the U.S. AntiDoping Agency.

“They would be stupid to knowingly engage in doping,” he said. “If it is found to be true then I am thoroughly disappoint­ed. … If the doping problem in Russia is as egregious as the McLaren report suggests and to the extent that the athletes are pawns in the process then I would have to join the cry to suspend all Russian athletes from the Games.”

Morozov, who holds three school records at USC, plans to appeal the decision to bar him from the Games to the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport.

A third Russian swimmer banned from the Games, Yulia Efimova, also trained with the Trojan Swim Club. She holds the world’s secondfast­est times this year in the 100-meter and 200-meter breaststro­ke.

Efimova was suspended in 2014 after failing a doping test, then was briefly suspended again this year after testing positive for meldonium before the Internatio­nal Swimming Federation reinstated her in May. She wasn’t allowed to train with any U.S.-based teams during the ban. This month’s L.A. Invitation­al results don’t list her as being attached to any club.

Russia’s Olympic committee withdrew Efimova from the Games.

She too intends to appeal the decision.

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