The Korea Times

No flag, no anthem, but world track gold for Russia

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DOHA (AP) — Three medalists on the victory lap. Only two with flags.

That’s the reality for Russian pole vaulter Anzhelika Sidorova after winning gold at the world championsh­ips on Sunday, officially as a neutral athlete.

But pole vaulting’s a sisterhood and Sidorova’s defeated rival, Sandi Morris of the United States, was her strongest advocate despite the doping sanctions on the Russian team.

“Sidorova is a friend of mine and she can’t help what’s going on politicall­y,” Morris said.

“If I were her, I would have done the same thing. Go out there and fight to compete, regardless of what’s going on in my country. I don’t necessaril­y think it’s a bad thing because the athletes are most important. If she’s clean, she’s clean, and I honestly believe she is.”

Sidorova competed in a muted blue uniform. Her neutral status, awarded by track’s governing body after vetting of her drug-test record, allows her to compete internatio­nally unlike most Russians but bans her from displaying any national symbols.

Track has taken the strongest line of any major federation against Russian doping, though Russia’s harshest critics would favor a ban against all Russian athletes.

At Monday’s medal ceremony the stirring Russian anthem will be replaced by music composed for the IAAF.

“Of course I’m not really comfortabl­e with it all, but I’m so happy. I was just so happy, I didn’t really think about it,” Sidorova said of her flag-free victory lap. “Gold is gold.”

Sidorova and Morris were the standouts from the start, clearing every height up to 4.90 meters on the first attempt. Morris missed her three shots at 4.95, leaving Sidorova one last jump for gold. Her personal best was 4.91 and she hadn’t come close in training — even 4.85 had been a challenge — but she sprinted down the runway to soar over the bar.

“I thought that yes, it’s the chance you have to take,” she said. No female vaulter has cleared 4.95 at a world championsh­ips since Russian Yelena Isinbayeva in 2005.

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