The Standard Journal

Doping in ex-Soviet nations echoes Russia’s problems

- By JAMES ELLINGWORT­H AP Sports Writer

MOSCOW ( AP) — While the scandal of Russian doping threatens to be one of the main talking points of the Rio Olympics, other countries are slipping under the radar despite sharing the tainted legacy of the Soviet sports system.

Countries like Belarus, Kazakhstan and Ukraine punch above their weight in the Olympic medal table, but their high rates of performanc­e enhancing drug use, flawed testing systems and records of political interferen­ce in sport are a cause for concern.

Excluding Russia, more than 80 medals, 22 of them gold, went to other post-Soviet countries at the 2012 Olympics, though some were later stripped when athletes tested positive. While none is a top-level sports power individual­ly, their joint achievemen­ts in the medal table rival those of Russia, but with much less scrutiny.

Russia is “successful and there is a problem,” said sports scientist Sergei Iljukov, an expert consultant with the Estonian AntiDoping Agency. “Those countries who are not that successful but have problems as well, they are still in the shadows.”

Belarusian Nadzeya Ostapchuk won the Olympic shot put gold in London with the help of the banned steroid metenolone but her glory lasted just a week before lab results came back and she lost the medal.

Athletes from six more ex-Soviet countries — Ukraine, Kazakhstan, Armenia, Moldova, Uzbekistan and Azerbaijan — including the winners of at least five gold medals have failed testing of their samples from the 2008 and 2012 Olympics, including retests this year.

While only Russia has been accused of operating a highly organized, state-sponsored doping system, with government officials covering up hundreds of failed drug tests, nearby countries share many of the elements of Russia’s flawed system.

Post- Soviet countries are among the worst offenders worldwide on doping, with hundreds of cases across various sports in the last decade.

Kazakhstan and Belarus have had numerous medals from various competitio­ns stripped for doping, and both have been threatened with a ban from weightlift­ing at next month’s Olympics for numerous doping offenses, including the case of four Kazakh gold medalists from the 2012 games who all face losing their titles for positive tests.

Kazakhstan’s biggest post-Soviet star, cyclist Alexander Vinokourov, was thrown out of the Tour de France and banned in 2007 for blood doping, but returned to win Olympic gold in 2012 before retiring.

Ukraine has problems in track and field, while in the Caucasus, Azerbaijan has racked up dozens of doping cases, mainly in weightlift­ing. Some ex-Soviet nations, particular­ly the Baltic states of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, tend to have fewer PED cases and higher rates of testing.

Decades of using drugs as a “shortcut” to internatio­nal sports success mean that sports science in ex-Soviet countries has been neglected and coaches rely on outdated knowledge, says Iljukov.

When more than 100 athletes in the former Soviet Union tested positive for the newly banned substance meldonium earlier this year, it emerged many had been taking it not to enhance performanc­e, but on the advice of coaches who believed it would prevent heart attacks, despite little evidence for the claim.

Sports officials in three ex-Soviet countries also told The Associated Press at the time that they believed meldonium to be a so-called “masking agent” which conceals other doping substances in a sample, even though antidoping experts say it has no such effect.

Ukraine’s National AntiDoping Center has the dubious distinctio­n of conducting the fewest tests worldwide, with just two in the whole of 2014, the last year for which full statistics are available. Although Ukraine was in political turmoil, that is a tiny number for a country which won 19 medals at the 2012 Olympics and is a major power in weightlift­ing, one of the worst-affected sports for doping.

Despite longstandi­ng doping problems, Belarus conducted 221 tests in 2014, less than a tenth of the number conducted in Finland, which has half the population.

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