The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

RUSSIA SLAPPED WITH 4-YEAR BAN FOR DOPING

- By Graham Dunbar

LAUSANNE, SWITZERLAN­D — Russia was slapped Monday with a four-year ban from internatio­nal sports events, including next summer’s Tokyo Olympics, over a longstandi­ng doping scandal, although its athletes will still be able to compete if they can show they are clean competitor­s.

The ruling by the World Anti-Doping Agency’s executive committee means Russia’s flag, name and anthem will not appear at the Tokyo Games, and the country also could be stripped of hosting world championsh­ips in Olympic sports. The sanctions are the harshest punishment yet for Russian state authoritie­s who were accused of tampering with a Moscow laboratory database. Russia’s anti-doping agency can appeal the decision to the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport within 21 days — an action it has signaled it would take.

“Russia was afforded every opportunit­y to get its house in order ... but it chose instead to continue in its stance of deception and

denial,” WADA president Craig Reedie said.

Russian athletes can compete in major events only if they are not implicated in positive doping tests or if their data was not manipulate­d, according to the WADA ruling.

For soccer’s 2022 World Cup, WADA said the Russian team will play under its name in the qualifying program in Europe. If it qualifies to play in Qatar, the team name must be changed to something neutral that likely would not include the word “Russia.” At the past two track and field world championsh­ips, Russians competed as “Authorized Neutral Athlete.” A softer line was taken ahead of the 2018 Pyeongchan­g Winter Games, when the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee suspended the Russian Olympic body yet allowed athletes and teams

to compete as “Olympic Athlete from Russia.”

Going forward, “they cannot use the name of the country in the name of the team,” WADA president-elect Witold Banka told The Associated Press.

Legal fallout from the WADA ruling at CAS seems sure to dominate preparatio­ns for the Tokyo Olympics, which open July 24. Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev urged sports organizati­ons to appeal and said WADA’s ruling was “a continuati­on of this anti-Russian hysteria which has already become chronic.”

The latest round of sanctions were imposed because tampering with the Moscow data was a new violation of anti-doping rules committed as recently as January.

Handing over a clean database to WADA was a key requiremen­t given to Russia 15 months ago to help bring closure to a scandal that has tainted the Olympics over the last decade. WADA investigat­ors and the IOC agreed that evidence showed Russian authoritie­s corrupted data from the Moscow lab that was long sealed by security forces. Hundreds of potential doping cases were deleted and evidence falsely planted to shift the blame onto whistleblo­wers. “Flagrant manipulati­on” of the data was “an insult to the sporting movement worldwide,” the IOC said last month.

Athletes whose data was manipulate­d in the 2012-15 period now face disciplina­ry cases by their sports’ governing body. “Yes, we do know who those athletes are. They will be kept out of the (Tokyo) Games,” said British lawyer Jonathan Taylor, chairman of the WADA panel whose proposed sanctions were unanimousl­y approved Monday.

However, the doping watchdog’s outgoing vice president was left frustrated by an unwillingn­ess to fully expel Russia from the Tokyo Olympics and 2022 Beijing Winter Games. “I’m not happy with the decision we made today,“said Linda Helleland,

‘Russia was afforded every opportunit­y to get its house in order ... but it chose instead to continue in its stance of deception and denial.’ Craig Reedie President, World Anti-Doping Agency

a Norwegian lawmaker who has long pushed for a tougher line against Russia. “This is the biggest sports scandal the world has ever seen.”

Although the IOC has called for the strongest possible sanctions, it wants those sanctions directed at Russian state authoritie­s rather than athletes or Olympic officials.

That position was opposed by most of WADA’s athlete commission. It wanted the kind of blanket ban Russia avoided for the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Olympics and the 2018 Pyeongchan­g Winter Games, when a state-run doping program was exposed by media and WADA investigat­ions after Russia hosted the 2014 Olympics in Sochi.

Russia has stuck to its claim that deceptive edits in the doping data were in fact made by WADA’s star witness, Grigory Rodchenkov. The former Moscow lab director’s flight into the witness protection program in the United States was the subject of an Oscar-winning documentar­y. “As usual, Russia has disregarde­d all of its promises and obligation­s to clean sport,” Rodchenkov said Monday in a statement.

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