Is Russia about to be thrown out of the Olympics?
There is little more than seven months to go before the start of the 2020 Olympics and, once again, Russia is bracing for another potentially severe punishment after accusations of state-sponsored, performance-enhancing, sports-tainting doping malfeasance.
The short-term athletic fate of hundreds of Russian competitors and officials is set to be decided on Monday, when the executive committee of the World Anti-Doping Agency meets in Lausanne, Switzerland, to decide whether to approve punishments recommended by its compliance group. The most serious of those penalties is a four-year ban from global sports for Russian athletes and teams.
The WADA committee will vote on Monday.Credit:AP
Sound familiar? It should.
For the better part of a decade, drama linked to Russia's broad doping apparatus has cast doubt over some of the world's biggest sports competitions. Every time it feels as if the scandal might wane, it starts again. For some people, the swift stream of accusations, investigations and denials has coalesced into a single, sludgy blur.
Worry not. We're here to answer the most pressing questions about this latest drug-related episode so you can understand what is at stake on Monday.
What happened this time?
In January, as part of an effort to bring Russia into compliance with global doping rules, WADA investigators went to Moscow to collect testing results from a laboratory at the centre of the years-long scandal. It wasn't a raid; Russian officials had agreed to turn over the data.
How did that go?
Not well. After years of doping scandals and penalties — in the most brazen case, urine samples of Russian athletes competing at the Sochi Olympics were passed through a hole in a wall to be altered — Russia seemingly had every reason to keep things above board with investigators this time. By September it became clear a significant number of results in the data the Russians surrendered to WADA had been changed or deleted in an effort to cover up — at minimum — dozens of potential doping violations.
(Russia, it must be noted, has rejected even the implication it did anything wrong.)
Neutral: Russian athletes competed under the Olympic flag at this year’s Winter Games in South Korea.Credit:EPA
What could happen to Russia now?
In late November, WADA's compliance committee recommended that Russia be barred from all global sporting events for four years. That would include next summer's Olympics in Tokyo, but also events like soccer's World Cup in 2022 and international championships across all sports in the months and years to come. Athletes, teams and officials could be barred from even attending them.
So pay close attention on Monday: that is when WADA's executive committee will decide whether to confirm the penalties. After that, it's up to the International Olympic Committee and other governing bodies who have signed the WADA anti-doping code to enforce them. As of now, the IOC has indicated it will adhere to any recommendation from WADA.
I feel like I've heard all this before …
That's because you have. Whispers of systemic doping in Russia at the start of the decade led to revelations of a huge doping program, which led to more revelations and serious punishments, which led to a brokered deal that allowed Russians to compete in the Rio and Pyeongchang Games, which led to the latest attempted cover-up, which has led to calls for more draconian punishments — like the global ban WADA will vote on when it meets on Monday.
Don't athletes from other countries dope?
For sure, and people get caught. Many get away with it. But Russia was caught — and it was caught doing so on a huge scale. To give some perspective, Russia has had 43 Olympic medals retroactively stripped for doping violations, which represents more than a third of the global total. And the sad truth, anti-doping experts say, is that its latest manipulations of test results have so clouded their cases that dozens of athletes who did cheat may never be punished.
Will Russia accept the penalties?
It seems unlikely. The next step for Russia, assuming WADA hands down some punishments, would be to appeal the decision at the Court of Arbitration for Sport in Switzerland. It might even win.
But no matter what, we could be set for another Olympic Games preceded by a lengthy legal fight.
New York Times
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