Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

London retests expose new doping cases

Four of 11 athletes are Russians who tested positive for complex steroid

- By Pablo Gorondi

BUDAPEST, Hungary — Eleven weightlift­ers, including three Russian medalists, have tested positive for banned drugs in the latest retests of samples from the 2012 London Olympics, the Internatio­nal Weightlift­ing Federation said Wednesday.

The Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport last week rejected the appeal by Russian track and field athletes against the ban imposed by the IAAF after allegation­s of state-sponsored doping and cover-ups.

The IWF said in a statement that all 11 athletes, six of whom were medalists, had been provisiona­lly suspended until their cases are closed.

Four of the 11 are Russians, who tested positive for dehydrochl­ormethyl testostero­ne, an anabolic steroid.

The positive Russian tests came from Alexandr Ivanov, silver medalist in the men’s 94-kilogram division; Nataliya Zabolotnay­a, silver in the women’s 75-kilogram division; Svetlana Tzarukaeva, silver in the women’s 63-kilogram division; and Andrey Demanov, who placed fourth in the men’s 94-kilogram division.

Ivanov also tested positive for tamoxifen, a hormone modulator.

The three other medal winners in the group were Hripsime Khurshudya­n, Armenia (bronze, over-75-kilogram division), Iryna Kulesha, Belarus (bronze, 75-kilogram division) and Cristina Iovu of Moldova (bronze, 53kilogram division).

Also testing positive were Turkey’s Sibel Simsek, Almas Uteshov of Kazakhstan, Georgia’s Rauli Tsirekidze and Intigam Zairov of Azerbaijan.

Bulgarian weightlift­ers have been banned from the upcoming Rio de Janeiro Games because of the large number of positive doping tests, while Russian weightlift­ers also risk being barred from the Olympics.

Monday, the IWF said it had requested “further clarificat­ion” from the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee and the World Anti-Doping Agency before its decision on which Russian athletes can be cleared to compete in Rio.

After consultati­ons Sunday, the IOC stopped short of a blanket ban on Russian athletes at the Rio Games, following a WADA report that accused Russia of widespread doping and cover-up.

Instead, Olympic selection was left to individual sporting federation­s, provided the athletes met certain criteria — which included a clean record in antidoping tests.

The IOC stores Olympic doping samples for 10 years, allowing them to be reopened and reanalyzed when improved testing methods become available.

So far, 31 of the 98 doping positives discovered in the retests of samples from the 2008 Beijing Games and the 2012 London Olympics were weightlift­ers.

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