The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Russia to learn its fate Dec. 5

Participat­ion in South Korea games in February at stake.

- By Graham Dunbar

GENEVA — The Internatio­nal Olympic Committee will decide Dec. 5 if Russia can compete at the PyeongChan­g Winter Games.

Russia faces being banned from the Feb. 9-25 games in South Korea as punishment for state-backed doping at the 2014 Sochi Olympics.

The IOC announced Friday a “decision with regard to the participat­ion of Russian athletes in the Olympic Winter Games PyeongChan­g 2018 will be taken” by its executive board on the opening day of a Dec. 5-6 meeting in its home city of Lausanne.

IOC President Thomas Bach is scheduled to announce the decision at a news conference.

In the past, Bach has criticized sport officials who call for a total ban on Russia, which could be offered sanctions that would allow some athletes to compete if they also have met stricter standards of doping controls.

Meanwhile, Russian President Vladimir Putin has said it would be “degrading” for its athletes to take part in the Winter Games as a neutral team and be denied their national flag and anthem.

That happened in August at the athletics world championsh­ips, where some Russian athletes won medals despite the Russian athletics body being suspended by the IAAF in fallout from the doping scandals.

The IOC board is awaiting reports from two commission­s it created to verify evidence detailed by World Anti-Doping Agency investigat­or Richard McLaren last year, weeks before the Rio de Janeiro Olympics.

One panel led by IOC board member Denis Oswald is prosecutin­g around 30 individual Russian athletes who are suspected of doping violations at Sochi. There, tainted samples were swapped with clean urine in the WADA-accredited testing laboratory.

Six cross-country skiers, including two medalists, have already been disqualifi­ed by Oswald’s three-man panel and banned from the Olympics for life. They plan appeals to the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport.

A second IOC panel is studying whether Russian state agencies, including the sports ministry and FSB security service, were involved in the doping program. That commission is chaired by Samuel Schmid, a former president of Switzerlan­d.

The case for Russia to stay in the PyeongChan­g Olympics got tougher this week when WADA declined to re-accredit the reformed national anti-doping agency known as RUSADA.

Russian authoritie­s refuse to acknowledg­e there was a state conspiracy to corrupt the Sochi Olympics — a key condition insisted on by WADA.

“It is clear that an unconditio­nal recognitio­n of the McLaren Report is impossible,” Russian IOC member Alexander Zhukov told the WADA meeting on Thursday in Seoul, South Korea.

Russia blames individual­s for the doping program, and wants whistleblo­wer Grigory Rodchenkov — the former director of the Moscow and Sochi labs — to be extradited from the United States.

Rodchenkov is in a witness protection program after fleeing to the U.S. and alleging to American media last year how the Sochi doping system worked.

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