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Rio hopes on hold as IOC considers total ban

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Russia could face Olympic ban after investigat­ion finds country’s doping rampant.

MONTREAL: Internatio­nal Olympic Committee (IOC) members were set for emergency talks yesterday to decide Russia’s status for the Rio Olympics after an investigat­ion found rampant state-run doping at the 2014 Sochi Winter Games and other events.

The World Anti-Doping Agency (Wada) called for all Russian competitor­s and officials to be banned from next month’s Games and other events after the report unveiled what IOC president Thomas Bach called “a shocking and unpreceden­ted attack on the integrity of sports and on the Olympic Games.”

A probe by Canadian law professor Richard McLaren for Wada found Russia’s secret service helped “the state-dictated fail-safe system” carried out by the Moscow sports ministry and sprawling into 30 sports over five years.

“The scale of what was happening requires Russia be banned from the Olympics and Paralympic­s,” said British IOC athletes commission member Adam Pengilly.

When asked if no ban imposed could mark the beginning of the end of the IOC, former skeleton competitor Pengilly replied, “it certainly has that potential.”

Wada’s executive committee said the IOC and the Internatio­nal Paralympic­s Committee should “decline entries, for Rio 2016, of all athletes submitted by the Russian Olympic Committee (ROC) and the Russian Paralympic Committee.”

It also called for Russian officials implicated in the scandal to be sacked and for “Russian government officials to be denied access to internatio­nal competitio­ns, including Rio 2016.”

McLaren said the cover-up started in 2010 after Russia’s “abysmal” results at the Vancouver Winter Olympics and continued until 2015 after the Sochi Games. It included the 2013 World Athletics Championsh­ips in Moscow and 2013 World University Games in Kazan.

President Vladimir Putin made the Sochi Games a showcase event and spent more than US$50 billion staging the Games.

Russia, which strongly denies any state involvemen­t in doping, is already banned from internatio­nal athletics by world governing body IAAF because of doping exposed last year.

There will be mounting pressure for that to be extended, even though Bach and some internatio­nal federation­s have called for a way for Russian athletes proved to be clean to compete in Rio.

“The IOC will not hesitate to take the toughest sanctions available against any individual or organisati­on implicated,” Bach said in a statement announcing the IOC conference yesterday to consider provisiona­l sanctions.

McLaren’s bombshell report said the sports ministry under Vitaly Mutko organised the subterfuge under which tainted urine samples were replaced and kept away from internatio­nal observers.

“The Moscow laboratory operated for the protection of doped Russian athletes within a state-dictated fail-safe system,” McLaren said.

“The Sochi laboratory operated a unique sample-swapping methodolog­y to enable doped Russian athletes to compete at the Winter Olympic Games,” he added.

According to the report, “the Ministry of Sport directed, controlled and oversaw the manipulati­on of athletes’ analytical results or sample swapping.”

It pointed to “the active participat­ion” and assistance of the FSB federal security service, athletes training groups and the Moscow and Sochi laboratori­es.

With the Rio Games due to start August 5, US Olympic Committee chief executive Scott Blackmun said the IOC, Wada and world governing bodies must “impose sanctions that are appropriat­e in relation to the magnitude of these offences and give clean athletes some measure of comfort they will be competing on a level playing field in Rio.”

Wada president Craig Reedie said Russia must sack government officials implicated in the wide-ranging doping scheme.

“At a minimum, Russian (Anti-Doping Agency) Rusada’s return to compliance cannot be considered until all persons from the Russian Ministry of Sport and other government department­s and agencies that are implicated by the report, including Rusada, are dismissed from their roles,” Reedie said.

The Kremlin said officials named in the report would be suspended, but also denounced the “dangerous” interferen­ce of politics in sport. It did not say which officials would be affected.

However, Mutko and his deputy Yury Nagornykh were among those named in the report.

US Anti-Doping Agency chief executive Travis Tygart said the report had revealed “a mind-blowing level of corruption” in Russian sport and all the way up to Putin’s government.

Wada mandated McLaren to investigat­e allegation­s made by former Moscow anti-doping laboratory director Grigory Rodchenkov in May — he is now in hiding in the United States and wanted by Russian authoritie­s.

Rodchenkov said the doping program was “working like a Swiss watch” at Sochi and helped at least 15 Russian medallists avoid doping detection.

McLaren called Rodchenkov “a credible and truthful person,” despite admitting to concocting doping cocktails for Russian athletes.

“I realise there are other aspects of his life that are not appropriat­e,” McLaren said. “I didn’t need to get into that.”

McLaren also insisted that he was “supremely confident” in the findings of the inquiry, even though “we’ve had a very intense 57 days.”

McLaren said his report was handed over to Wada on Saturday and had not been leaked in advance.

A prior US-Canadian letter pushing for a total ban on Russian competitor­s at Rio was based on “rampant speculatio­n” about the findings, he said.

 ?? AP ?? Russian President Vladimir Putin, centre, and Sports Minister Vitaly Mutko, right, during the 2014 Sochi Games.
AP Russian President Vladimir Putin, centre, and Sports Minister Vitaly Mutko, right, during the 2014 Sochi Games.

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