Daily Dispatch

IAAF’s Coe speaks out on doping

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SEBASTIAN Coe has conceded that unless he and his fellow leaders fully grasp the enormity of the crisis in their sport, there are “unlikely to be many tomorrows for athletics”.

In his Sunday Telegraph newspaper column, the president of the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Athletics Federation­s (IAAF) said he and his colleagues could “almost certainly” have done more to get to the heart of the scandal that has rocked the sport.

Coe, writing at the end of a dramatic week which saw the IAAF provisiona­lly suspend Russia following a report from the World Anti-Doping Agency that uncovered evidence of state-controlled doping in the country, added it had been a “horror show” for athletics.

The Briton also said the “architectu­re of anti-doping” systems had failed the world’s track and field competitor­s and acknowledg­ed a difficult self-examinatio­n as he reflected on whether the sport could have approached the unfolding crisis more effectivel­y.

Friday’s decision to suspend Russia after a conference call of IAAF Council members, Coe said, was made amid an atmosphere of “sadness and anger” and “the recognitio­n that unless we fully grasp the enormity of our plight there were unlikely to be many tomorrows for athletics”.

The double Olympic champion, who has found himself in the unusual position of being criticised, explained this week’s events had led him to ask, “How did we get to this? “The decision ... to penalise Russia was also a difficult one and running against every instinct around that conference call. But the best way to protect clean athletes is to be unflinchin­g in our commitment to them, and not just in words,” said Coe.

“We have to create structures that are always in their corner and here none of us come out very well.

“The architectu­re of anti-doping has failed them and, we have to ask, were the walls too high in many of our organisati­ons to properly investigat­e abuses? Almost certainly ‘yes’ has to be our uncomforta­ble answer,” he added.

Coe reflected on an unnamed, no-nonsense coach who helped kickstart his running career several decades ago.

“The toughest question I grapple with is inevitably a very personal one, self-examinatio­n is never easy,” he said.

“I guess the question I am asking myself at this very moment is, ‘ How on earth have we got from a sport that was underpinne­d by people like that [coach] to the horror show that played out?’.” — Reuters

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