Porterville Recorder

Distrust, anger grip Russian sports ahead of key doping vote

- By JAMES ELLINGWORT­H

ST. PETERSBURG, Russia — As it edges closer to a ban from the Winter Olympics, the Russian sports world is a bitter place.

Investigat­ions into doping haven’t encouraged Russian athletes to speak out about abuses. Instead, there is a public hunt for whistleblo­wers, or “traitors to the motherland,” as cross-country ski federation president Yelena Valbe calls them.

Meanwhile, Russian President Vladimir Putin has claimed the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee — which will make the final ruling on Russia’s eligibilit­y — is being manipulate­d by shadowy U.S. interests intent on using doping scandals to disgrace his government ahead of elections in March.

Ahead of that IOC ruling, Russian officials face two days of World Antidoping Agency meetings this week which will help determine Russia’s Olympic future.

Formally, the issue on the table is the status of Russia’s drug-testing agency, not Olympic participat­ion.

WADA restored most of the Russian agency’s key powers in June and will rule this week on whether to readmit it fully. The sticking point isn’t the agency’s performanc­e, but the Russian government and sports organizati­ons’ reluctance to accept any responsibi­lity for what WADA considers a vast doping scheme and cover-up, including at the 2014 Sochi Olympics.

Since the government funds RUSADA and the sports bodies are represente­d on its board, they have to convince WADA they’re worthy trustees.

WADA goes into its summit with a stronger hand after revealing Friday that it now has what it believes to be the database of testing results from the Moscow drug-testing laboratory from 2012-15, the period when the alleged coverup scheme was at its height. That could confirm earlier whistleblo­wer evidence or lead to even more cases against athletes.

WADA’S two key demands are that Russia accepts the findings of WADA investigat­or Richard Mclaren’s report from last year and that it releases a batch of seized urine samples from the Moscow laboratory.

Russia refused to do either.

“It’s impossible to agree with (the report), because the report contains a lot of discrepanc­ies,” Sports Minister Pavel Kolobkov said Monday, adding “it will be hard for us” to convince WADA to reinstate the Russian agency.

Accepting Mclaren’s findings would mean abandoning a Kremlin line, stated regularly and vehemently, that Russia has never had any state involvemen­t in doping.

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