Santa Fe New Mexican

WADA chief turns criticism to U.S. sports

- By Rob Harris

LONDON — Facing increased criticism over Russia’s reinstatem­ent, World Anti-Doping Agency president Craig Reedie responded to one of his harshest detractors by pointing out that the major American sports leagues routinely ignore internatio­nal guidelines.

Reedie, speaking in an interview with the Associated Press on Thursday at a WADA event, again defended the plan to rehabilita­te Russia following a threeyear ban for corrupting sporting events, including the 2014 Sochi Olympics, by covering up doping.

Critics, including U.S. AntiDoping Agency chief executive Travis Tygart, have said Reedie’s objectivit­y has been compromise­d because he is also a member of the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee and that he should leave one of the positions.

“He should be aware that the rest of the world is asking questions about why he spends quite so much time criticizin­g the organizati­on who is actually doing almost everything he wants done as opposed to looking after his own backyard,” Reedie said.

“They have their own rules,” Reedie added. “They have a completely different system of agreement on how the sport is conducted. I just think I would like USADA or somebody in the United States … to go and speak to the players’ unions and suggest to them that the whole developmen­t of clean sport would set a very good example if that could be done in the United States.”

Reedie said he has tried to persuade NFL Commission­er Roger Goodell to get football subject to the WADA code.

“The league is actually answerable to the owners,” Reedie said of the teams. “There is a general belief in the United States that instead of sanctionin­g maybe you should try the rehabilita­tion you know as a principle. I don’t think that’s necessaril­y wrong. But harmonizat­ion with the rest of the world is difficult if that’s your priority.”

Reedie was speaking a day after an event in Washington where Olympic athletes joined the acting White House drug czar and anti-doping officials from seven other countries in calling on the WADA to reform its governance.

“They’ve been saying roughly this for the last two and half years,” Reedie said. “It’s repetitive.”

Reedie has another year to go in his second three-year term as WADA president. His tenure began in 2013.

The WADA presidency rotates between representa­tives of government­s and sporting bodies. The agency gets half of its funding from government­s around the world and the other half from the Olympic movement.

Despite WADA investigat­ors finding that a state-sponsored doping program was run from Moscow, the Russians haven’t had to accept the full findings before being readmitted to the anti-doping agency, which allows them to test athletes again.

When Russia was suspended, internatio­nal sports federation­s were unable to schedule events in the country. But on Thursday, the amateur boxing associatio­n chose Russia to host the 2019 Women’s World Championsh­ips — the country’s first worlds event since the national antidoping agency was reinstated in September.

The whole saga, Reedie said, has taken a toll on his home life and he added that he did not enjoy reading newspaper articles calling for his resignatio­n.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO ?? Critics say that because World Anti-Doping Agency President Craig Reedie is a member of the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee his objectivit­y has been compromise­d.
AP FILE PHOTO Critics say that because World Anti-Doping Agency President Craig Reedie is a member of the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee his objectivit­y has been compromise­d.

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