The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

3. More bad news for Russia

Late American Holcomb will move up to two silvers.

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With four more Russians disqualifi­ed for doping at the Sochi Olympics, IOC President Thomas Bach signals a possible shift toward barring the country’s athletes from the Pyeongchan­g Games. Twotime bobsled gold medalist Alexander Zubkov has been stricken from the 2014 records.

Steven Holcomb remains a winner of three Olympic medals. He will have held only one of them.

Another round of Internatio­nal Olympic Committee sanctions against Russian athletes who were found to have participat­ed in doping at the 2014 Sochi Games came down Friday, headlined by bobsledder Alexander Zubkov being stripped of the gold medals he won in two- and four-man events.

Holcomb, who died in May, will posthumous­ly move up one spot from bronze to silver in each of those races, once the medals are formally reallocate­d.

“It’s going to be weird for his family and it’s going to be weird for us,” U.S. veteran push athlete Chris Fogt, who was part of Holcomb’s four-man team in Sochi, said after the IOC decision Friday.

“I’d like to think that we would be all together when it happens. And when we get those medals, we’re not going to have him there.”

A half-dozen U.S. bobsled and skeleton athletes are

going to benefit from the Russian medalist disqualifi­cations.

Skeleton racer Matt Antoine and bobsledder­s Holcomb, Fogt, Steven Langton and Curt Tomasevicz all

left Sochi with bronzes and will be getting silvers.

Skeleton racer Katie Uhlaender will be getting her first medal, with her finish upgraded from fourth to bronze. And combined, they’ll be collecting a total of $45,000 in additional bonus money from the U.S. Olympic Committee, which rewards medal performanc­es.

Now comes a delicate matter, with Holcomb’s family likely having to surrender his bronzes and await the exchange for the silvers. Holcomb’s father and one of his sisters wore the bronze medals at his memorial service in May in Lake Placid, N.Y.

“It’s definitely a little bitterswee­t that Holcomb isn’t here to see this happening,” said Langton, who was with Holcomb for the two-man medal-winning ride in Sochi and was also in the four-man sled with Holcomb, Fogt and Tomasevicz. “He worked hard and he earned those medals.”

Zubkov has been at World Cup races this season as president of the Russian bobsled federation. Unless the ruling is overturned on appeal, he won’t be at the Pyeongchan­g Olympics this winter, or any other Olympics. The IOC says sanctions against him — and other athletes found to have doped — include lifetime banishment from the games.

The Internatio­nal Bobsled and Skeleton Federation provisiona­lly suspended Russian skeleton athletes Aleksandr Tretiakov and Elena Nikitina from World Cup events — both won medals in Sochi that were stripped this week. It’s likely that a similar ban could be issued to the bobsledder­s involved in Friday’s IOC ruling, including Zubkov.

“It’s important to be able to move forward,” said USA Bobsled and Skeleton CEO Darrin Steele, also an executive with the IBSF. “No doubt about it.”

Pending the IBSF changing results as the IOC has asked, the two-man gold medal will now almost certainly go to Beat Hefti and Alex Baumann of Switzerlan­d. The fourman gold medal would go to the Latvian sled driven by Oskars Melbardis and pushed by Arvis Vilkaste, Daumants Dreiskens and Janis Strenga.

Holcomb’s sleds would get the silver in both races.

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 ?? MARK HUMPHREY / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Russian bobsledder Alexander Zubkov (carrying the national flag during the 2014 Winter Olympics opening ceremony) was stripped of the two gold medals he won in the two- and four-man events for doping.
MARK HUMPHREY / ASSOCIATED PRESS Russian bobsledder Alexander Zubkov (carrying the national flag during the 2014 Winter Olympics opening ceremony) was stripped of the two gold medals he won in the two- and four-man events for doping.

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