The Sentinel-Record

Russian weightlift­ers banned from Rio for doping

- PABLO GORONDI

Hungary — All of Russia’s weightlift­ers were banned from the Rio Olympics on Friday for doping for what the internatio­nal federation called “extremely shocking” results that brought the sport into “disrepute.”

The eight competitio­n spots have been offered to other countries.

The Internatio­nal Weightlift­ing Federation said the “integrity of the weightlift­ing sport has been seriously damaged on multiple times and levels by the Russians.” It said the punishment was an “appropriat­e sanction” to “preserve the status of the sport.”

The IWF described the dopOXNARD,

ing results as “extremely shocking and disappoint­ing.”

Weightlift­ing became the second sport after track and field to issue blanket bans on Russian athletes. Other sports — including rowing, wrestling, modern pentathlon and sailing — have banned one or more Russians from competing in Rio de Janeiro, but not all of the country’s eligible athletes.

To replace the eight Russian lifters in Rio, five countries were offered places in the men’s competitio­n — Belarus, Croatia, El Salvador, Mongolia and Serbia. For the women, Albania, Georgia and Moldova became eligible. Because of the lateness of the decision, the IWF said it was not clear whether all the spots would be filled

In justifying its actions against Russia, the IWF said retests of samples from seven Russian weightlift­ers who took part in the 2008 Beijing Olympics or 2012 London Olympics resulted in positive tests, and more were expected.

Two female weightlift­ers — Tatiana Kashirina and Anastasiia Romanova — were withdrawn by the Russian federation for earlier doping offenses. The names of the other banned lifters were not announced.

Four additional weightlift­ers were mentioned in World Anti-Doping Agency investigat­or Richard McLaren’s report — which alleged a massive cover-up of failed drug tests — as having benefited from the “disappeari­ng positive methodolog­y system” used by Russia to mask doping results.

The IWF said the ban also applied to Russia’s technical official for the Rio Games, whose appointmen­t was withdrawn.

The IWF ruling took time because on Tuesday it asked the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee and WADA for “further clarificat­ion” on the recent IOC ruling giving individual sports federation­s the responsibi­lity of deciding which Russian athletes can compete in Rio.

Weightlift­ing has long had problems with doping, though the federation has gradually toughened testing and sanctions. Tellingly, 31 of the 98 positives confirmed so far in the retests of samples taken at the 2008 or 2012 Olympics have been by weightlift­ers.

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