Albuquerque Journal

Report: Over 1,000 Russians doped

WADA alleges state involvemen­t; IOC pressured to punish nation before ’18 Games

- BY STEPHEN WILSON ASSOCIATED PRESS

LONDON — Russia’s sports reputation was ripped apart again Friday when a new report into systematic doping detailed a vast “institutio­nal conspiracy” that covered more than 1,000 athletes in over 30 sports and corrupted the drug-testing system at the 2012 and 2014 Olympics.

The findings were handed over to the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee, which will be under pressure to take action against the Russians ahead of the 2018 Winter Games in Pyeongchan­g, South Korea.

“It is impossible to know just how deep and how far back this conspiracy goes,” World AntiDoping Agency investigat­or Richard McLaren said. “For years, internatio­nal sports competitio­ns have unknowingl­y been hijacked by Russians. Coaches and athletes have been playing on an uneven field. Sports fans and spectators have been deceived.”

McLaren’s second and final report said the conspiracy involved the Russian Sports Ministry, national anti-doping agency and the FSB intelli-

gence service, providing further details of state involvemen­t in a massive program of cheating and cover-ups that operated on an “unpreceden­ted scale” from 2011-15.

The Canadian law professor described the Russian doping program as “a cover-up that evolved over the years from uncontroll­ed chaos to an institutio­nalized and discipline­d medal-winning strategy and conspiracy.”

The findings confirmed much of the evidence contained in McLaren’s first report issued in July, while expanding the number of athletes involved and the overall scope of the cheating program in the sports powerhouse.

“Over 1,000 Russian athletes competing in summer, winter and Paralympic sport can be identified as being involved in or benefiting from manipulati­ons to conceal positive doping tests,” McLaren said.

The names of those athletes, including 600 summer sports competitor­s, have been turned over to internatio­nal federation­s to pursue disciplina­ry sanctions, he said.

The 144-page report provided further forensic evidence of manipulati­on of samples at the 2014 Sochi Winter Games, where sealed doping bottles were opened with special tools by intelligen­ce agents and tainted urine was replaced with clean urine to beat the drug-testing system.

Russians who won 15 medals in Sochi had their samples tampered with, including two athletes who won four gold medals, McLaren found.

The report also found the Russian doping program corrupted the 2012 London Olympics on an “unpreceden­ted scale.” While no Russians tested positive at the time of the games, McLaren said the sports ministry gave athletes a “cocktail of steroids … in order to beat the detection thresholds at the London lab.”

The report said 15 Russian medal winners in London had been on a list of athletes who had been protected by Russian officials from testing positive before the games. Ten of those athletes have since had their London medals stripped after their samples were retested.

Declaring that McLaren’s findings detailed “a fundamenta­l attack on the integrity of the Olympic Games and on sport in general,” the IOC said it would retest samples of all Russian athletes who competed in Sochi and London. IOC President Thomas Bach said any athlete or official involved “in such as sophistica­ted manipulati­on system” should be banned for life from the Olympics.

The Russian Sports Ministry said it was studying the report and denied the country had any state-sponsored doping system. Other findings in the report include:

Six Russian athletes who won a total of 21 medals at the Sochi Paralympic­s had their urine samples tampered with.

Two female hockey players at the Sochi Olympics had samples that contained male DNA.

Eight Sochi samples had salt content that was physiologi­cally impossible in a healthy human.

U.S. Anti-Doping Agency CEO Travis Tygart called McLaren’s report “another staggering example of how the Olympic movement has been corrupted and clean athletes robbed by Russia’s state-supported doping system.”

 ?? IVAN SEKRETAREV/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? From left, Yulia Tarasenko, Dimitry Shlyakhtin and Andrey Silnov of the Russian Athletic Federation attend a news conference on Friday after reports of massive drug cheating and cover-ups by Olympians.
IVAN SEKRETAREV/ASSOCIATED PRESS From left, Yulia Tarasenko, Dimitry Shlyakhtin and Andrey Silnov of the Russian Athletic Federation attend a news conference on Friday after reports of massive drug cheating and cover-ups by Olympians.

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