The Manila Times

Doping casts shadow over Putin’s hopes for sporting prestige

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A proposed four-year doping ban on Russian athletes would deal a huge new blow to President Vladimir Putin’s efforts to use sport to boost the country’s prestige and his own reputation.

But experts say the Russian leader could also turn the ban to his advantage — by portraying it as a politicall­y motivated attempt by the West to once again humiliate the country at the expense of its athletes.

The executive committee of the World Anti-Doping Agency will meet in Paris on December 9 to consider a recommenda­tion for the ban, which would exclude Russian athletes from major sports events including the 2020 Tokyo Olympics and 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics.

A WADA review panel has accused Moscow of falsifying laboratory data handed over to investigat­ors as part of a probe into the doping allegation­s that have plagued Russia for years.

In power for nearly 20 years, Putin has made sport and healthy living a cornerston­e of his popularity and is regularly shown on state television taking part in judo matches or on the ice for hockey games.

His government poured enormous resources into Russia’s hosting of the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics — the first Olympics in Russia since 1980 — but the Games were tainted by claims of widespread, statespons­ored doping.

Russian athletes faced a series of bans over the next few years and were forced to participat­e in the 2018 Pyeongchan­g Winter Games as neutral competitor­s.

‘Headed for catastroph­e’

Redemption seemed on the way with Russia’s successful hosting of the 2018 football World Cup, and the reinstatem­ent the same year of its RUSADA anti- doping body.

But if the allegation­s of tampering with laboratory data are true, Russian authoritie­s have managed to re- ignite the scandal, observers say.

“I fear that we’re headed for catastroph­e, everything was done too cynically and grossly,” Sergei Medvedev, a professor at Moscow’s Higher School of Economics, wrote in Facebook post.

The avid sports enthusiast compared the doping scandal to Russia’s handling of the assassinat­ion attempt of defector Sergei Skripal in England and its denials of supplying separatist­s in eastern Ukraine with the missile that shot down flight MH17.

In both instances Russia shifted blame with vehement denials and finger-pointing.

But in this case, Medvedev said, Russia will not get away “with a smirk from Putin” and a generation of Russian athletes could be prevented from pursuing their dreams.

Sports commentato­rs were hard on Russian authoritie­s in the wake of the potential ban being announced, with many blaming criminal investigat­ors who were responsibl­e for handling the data.

“I am sure our officials will never recognise that they have disgraced themselves and will never ask for forgivenes­s,” sports commentato­r Alexei Durnovo told Agence France-Presse.

“We will never know the names” of those responsibl­e, he added.

Popular sports commentato­r Vasily Utkin even urged athletes to sue Russian authoritie­s, who he said “were geneticall­y linked to the security services”.

At the same time, analysts said the crisis was unlikely to seriously affect Putin’s personal popularity.

Athletes ‘betrayed’

Denis Volkov, deputy director at pollster Levada, said authoritie­s and state- controlled media would bill the ban as a new move by the West to humiliate Russia — and that the majority of Russians would accept that line.

“The authoritie­s will use this to their advantage,” Volkov told AFP. “All of this will be interprete­d in the sense of the West always against Russia.”

The question will be whether Russia’s athletes buy it.

Maria Lasitskene, a three-time world high jump champion, has already warned she would quit Russia and train elsewhere so as not to miss the Tokyo Olympics.

Along with hurdler Sergey Shubenkov and pole vaulter Anzhelika Sidorova, the 26-yearold missed the Rio Olympics in 2016 because of the doping scandal.

“I do not intend to miss a second Olympics in a row because of some strange people who cannot do their job honestly,” Lasitskene has said on Instagram.

Russian rugby star Vasily Artemyev said the country’s athletes have been “betrayed”.

The Russian men’s rugby sevens team is already out of contention for the Tokyo Games but the women’s team is still hoping to qualify.

Artemyev, who became a darling of the Rugby World Cup in Japan this year, said Russia needed to dismantle its current sport management model and build a new one from scratch.

“We have to look each other in the eye and develop a new strategic plan,” he told AFP. “We need a new face for Russian sport and it should be sincere.”

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