USA TODAY US Edition

IOC faces pressure before Russia doping ruling

Banning country from Pyeongchan­g an option

- Rachel Axon

For more than a year, the rhetorical lines have been drawn on whether Russia should be banned from the Olympics for operating a system of doping.

Some athletes and anti-doping leaders have been calling for such a ban since the lead-up to last summer’s Olympics in Rio. Russia, sport leaders and athletes have rebuffed those calls for a collective sanction.

On Tuesday, rhetoric will give way to action as the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee’s executive board will decide on sanctions for Russia at its meeting in Lausanne, Switzerlan­d. Its decision comes almost two months before the start of the Pyeongchan­g Olympics on Feb. 9.

For all the exhausting familiarit­y of a scandal that has roiled internatio­nal sports for three years, the IOC is set to possibly take a new approach and stronger stance on Russia’s state-run system of doping athletes and subverting anti-doping controls, particular­ly at the Sochi Olympics in 2014.

“I think they have to consider that a significan­t part of the world thinks they blew it in Rio by not acting,” Canadian IOC member Dick Pound said. “Now that they’ve had a chance to assess all the evidence, it’s really important that they be seen to act to protect the integrity of the Olympics.”

The IOC could consider anything from a fine to a complete ban of the country, though many in sport and antidoping are coalescing around a sanction that bans Russia but allows individual­s to compete as neutral athletes.

Last year, Canadian lawyer Richard McLaren produced an investigat­ion that found a scheme of urine swapping through a hole in the wall in Sochi. The report, which was commission­ed by the World Anti-Doping Agency, included 28 Russian athletes who competed there and had evidence that showed their samples had been tampered with.

A separate IOC commission chaired by Denis Oswald has already disqualifi­ed results of 25 Russian athletes in Sochi, resulting in a loss of 11 medals.

The first reasoned decision of the Oswald Commission accepted McLaren’s findings and found Grigory Rodchenkov, the former Moscow lab director who operated the system and provided much of the evidence of it, to be credible.

With one IOC commission accepting of those findings, the factors that led to the decision in Rio have changed. The IOC has done its investigat­ions and is adjudicati­ng cases. It is not in the time crunch it was last summer, when McLaren’s first report was released less than three weeks before the Olympics.

“This difference is that now we have had the opportunit­y to follow due process and we have had the opportunit­y to give everybody a fair hearing,” IOC President Thomas Bach said last month at the European Olympic Committees (EOC) General Assembly, Inside the

Games reported.

“Now, and this is the most important difference, maybe, it is about what happened at the Olympic Winter Games Sochi 2014. Now it is about us. Now it is about the integrity of the Olympic Games.”

Before Rio, the IOC opted not to ban Russia. Instead, it gave criteria about the eligibilit­y of athletes and left the decisions to the internatio­nal federation­s that govern each sport.

A majority of the Russia delegation ended up competing.

“I think if the IOC ducks its own responsibi­lity yet again, it will have no credibilit­y left,” Pound said. “If it’s not going to do that, why do you need the IOC?”

A more likely scenario is that the IOC suspend the Russian Olympic Committee while creating a path for individual­s who can demonstrat­e their anti-doping record to compete as neutral athletes. That would mean no Russian flag at the Olympics and no Russian anthem should an athlete win a gold medal.

“I would never say you should punish clean athletes, but I think allowing clean athletes to prove that they’re clean and compete under a neutral flag would be an elegant solution,” U.S. biathlete Lowell Bailey said. “You’re talking about state-sponsored doping. That needs to be dealt with and punished accordingl­y.”

As the commission­s have progressed their work in the 18 months since the IOC was last faced with this decision, the pressure has only increased on the IOC and how it handles one of the world’s great sporting powers.

Said U.S. Biathlon president and CEO Max Cobb, “The best thing for the IOC to do is ignore the noise and focus on finding a just and proportion­al response.”

 ?? KEVIN JAIRAJ/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Elena Nikitina celebrated after winning the bronze medal in the women’s skeleton during the Sochi 2014 Games, but the IOC took away her medal last month for doping violations during those Winter Games.
KEVIN JAIRAJ/USA TODAY SPORTS Elena Nikitina celebrated after winning the bronze medal in the women’s skeleton during the Sochi 2014 Games, but the IOC took away her medal last month for doping violations during those Winter Games.

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