The Denver Post

Will Moscow allow Russian athletes compete in Paris?

- By James Ellingwort­h

DUESSELDOR­F, GERMANY » With 100 days togo until the Paris Olympics, it’s still not clear whether any athletes from Russia who are expected to qualify will actually go.

The question is whether Moscow will accept the conditions that the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee set for Russia in the wake of its invasion of Ukraine. Ultimately, it could be up to individual athletes to decide whether to participat­e.

The IOC expects that 36 Russian athletes — and possibly as many as 54 — will do well enough at qualifying events to compete in Paris.

The IOC will let them compete as “neutral athletes,” meaning they can’t use their country’s flag or anthem or participat­e in team sports such as soccer and basketball.

Athletes with links to the military or who have expressed support for the war will be banned.

The same restrictio­ns apply to Russian ally Belarus. Athletes from Russia and Belarus also aren’t allowed to take part in the opening ceremony on July 26.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has questioned the rules and asked the Russian Olympic Committee and the Sports Ministry to submit recommenda­tions on whether the country’s athletes should compete in Paris.

The ROC and Sports Ministry have sharply contrastin­g views.

In social media posts, ROC President Stanislav Pozdnyakov alleged the IOC “again a nd again thinks up illegitima­te criteria” for athletes and “consistent­ly carries out external political orders to isolate Russian sport.”

Sports Minister O leg Matytsin, however, h as said Russia should not boycott the Olympics.

“We must preserve the possibilit­y of dialogue as much as possible and take part in competitio­ns,” Matytsin said last month in comments reported by state news agency Tass.

Russia sent 335 athletes to Tokyo in 2021— winning 20 golds among 71 total medals. They competed without national symbols at that Olympics and at the Winter Games in 2018 and 2022 because of a doping scandal.

Ukraine opposes Russians participat­ing at the Paris Olympics in any capacity but eased its policy of boycotting events where “neutral” Russians compete.

IOC President Thomas Bach suggested last month “threats of boycotts” from the two countries were no longer an issue.

“Now we can say this discussion, at this moment in time, is over ,” Bach t old a gathering of Pacific sports officials in Fiji .“We still have different opinions. One saying we have been going too far with the sanctions for those who violated the Olympic Charter. Others are saying we have not gone far enough. Normally this shows you that you’re in a good position if both sides are not 100% happy.”

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