Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

CAS sanctions Russian, what happens now?

- EDDIE PELLS

The highest court in sports sanctioned Russian figure skater Kamila Valieva for doping violations at the 2022 Beijing Olympics. The ruling set the stage for U.S. skaters to receive gold medals after they finished second behind Valieva and her teammates in the team competitio­n.

The case rocked the Olympics when, about 24 hours after she led Russia to the victory in the team event, details about a sample taken six weeks earlier at Russia’s national championsh­ips revealed there was a banned heart medication in her system.

More than a half-dozen proceeding­s and appeals took place over the ensuing 23 months, culminatin­g in Monday’s decision by the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sports, which is essentiall­y the supreme court for internatio­nal sports events.

A look at the case, and what happens next:

ABOUT THE MEDALS

The Internatio­nal Olympic Committee controls Olympic medals. When Valieva’s case first erupted, the IOC decided not to award medals from the event while the skaters were in Beijing.

Though the CAS decision disqualifi­ed Valieva’s results from the Olympics, it’s up to the IOC to officially decide who wins what. It seems certain that, at a meeting in March, it will award the gold to the Americans, while silver and bronze will go to Japan and Canada, which finished third and fourth, respective­ly, in the event. There’s also a chance Valieva could appeal the case to Switzerlan­d’s supreme court, though chances of a victory there are very slim.

How and where the medals will be presented is anyone’s guess. Sometimes, national Olympic committees hold ceremonies in conjunctio­n with big events in their countries, to give the Olympians a feel of what it might have been like to receive those medals at the games themselves. Other times, the medals are handed out at internatio­nal championsh­ips. Figure skating’s next world championsh­ips are set for March 18-24 in Montreal, the same week as the IOC meeting. The next Winter Olympics are still two years away.

Regardless, pretty much everyone agrees that athletes who get their medals months or years after the contest have been cheated out of not just their moment, but also any post-Olympics benefit, both financial and emotional, that comes from bringing home that medal in the days after they’ve won it.

“I think two years is too long for this decision to be made, and we may never know why it has taken this long,” said U.S. ice dancer Evan Bates, who was on the team in Beijing, and who partnered with Madison Chock for their fifth U.S. title over the weekend. “We’re just looking forward to getting some closure after a long waiting period.”

VALIEVA’S FUTURE

In many circles, Valieva was seen as the most helpless victim. She was 15 when the positive test was discovered, and evidence pointed to people in her entourage who were giving her the drug trimetazid­ine, which can be administer­ed to prevent angina attacks but is also known to increase blood flow efficiency and improve endurance.

Days after her case exploded, she skated in an error-filled free skate in the individual event and the reaction of her coach — “Why did you stop fighting? Explain it to me, why?” — was cringewort­hy. Even IOC President Thomas Bach weighed in, saying her entourage showed “a tremendous coldness, it was chilling to see this.”

Russia invaded Ukraine less than a week after the Olympics ended, and figure skating’s internatio­nal federation has since banned Russian skaters from its events. Valieva, who turns 18 in April, has skated in Russian national competitio­ns, but is no longer considered the invincible force she was heading into Beijing.

It’s not unheard of for worldclass skaters to fall off the radar, then return to their former glory, though clearly there is more involved in Valieva’s future — for instance, Russia’s standing in internatio­nal sports — than simply her ability and desire to return.

RUSSIA AND THE OLYMPICS

Technicall­y, Valieva’s case was not part of the doping scandal that has prevented Russia from competing under its own flag at the Olympics since 2016. In 2022, Valieva was technicall­y competing as a member of the “ROC” — short for Russian Olympic Committee, not for Russia itself — because of sanctions stemming from the state-sponsored doping scandal designed to help Russians win more medals at their home Olympics in Sochi in 2014.

But what the Valieva case exposed was the fact that, even 10 years after Sochi, things are still not back to “normal” in Russia.

The country’s anti-doping agency remains noncomplia­nt with World Anti-Doping Agency rules. And the fact that the CAS case was an appeal of a Russian anti-doping tribunal decision that would’ve awarded the gold medal to Valieva is a sign that Russia still isn’t completely on the same page with internatio­nal regulators.

The war in Ukraine has only added to the confusion.

Some sports, such as track, aren’t allowing Russians to compete at this year’s Paris Olympics under any circumstan­ces. Others will allow them in, but only as “Individual Neutral Athletes” because of the war — a status not unlike what existed from 2016-22 because of the doping.

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