Vancouver Sun

Russian track athletes could still be at 2020 Olympics

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Russian track and field athletes could be cleared to compete at next year’s Tokyo Olympics as neutrals despite the federation’s ongoing suspension, its acting chief said on Friday.

The World Anti-doping Agency (WADA) on Monday handed Russia a four-year ban from top global sporting events, including the next Summer and Winter Olympics, as punishment for tampering with laboratory data.

The ruling means Russian athletes cleared to compete at next year’s Summer Olympics will do so without their country’s flag and anthem. But Russian track and field athletes face additional obstacles to being cleared for competitio­n after their federation’s reinstatem­ent process was halted last month.

“It’s possible under a neutral flag, like with all other sports as far as I understand,” Yulia Tarasenko, who was named acting president of the federation last month, said of the prospect of seeing Russia track and field athletes in Tokyo.

World Athletics, the sport’s global governing body formerly known as the IAAF, last month halted the Russian federation’s reinstatem­ent process and raised the possibilit­y of it being expelled altogether after its president and six others were provisiona­lly suspended over serious breaches of anti-doping rules.

World Athletics also said it was reviewing the process it used to previously clear some Russians to compete as neutrals.

The seven people suspended were found to have provided false explanatio­ns and forged documents to explain three whereabout­s violations by Russian high jumper Danil Lysenko, the silver medallist at the 2017 world championsh­ips.

Russia’s athletics federation was suspended in 2015 after a report commission­ed by WADA found evidence of mass doping in the sport.

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