Djokovic glad some Russian athletes competing in Rio
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[August 04, 2016]
RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil (Reuters)
- Serbia's Novak Djokovic said the doping scandal engulfing Russia
was bad for the country and international sport, but he was glad
some Russian athletes have been allowed to compete at the Rio
Olympics.
The World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) accused Russia of running a
state-sponsored doping program and called for the country to be
banned from the Olympics.
Although Russia avoided an outright suspension, scores of its
athletes have been banned by individual federations, including
essentially the entire track-and-field team.
World number one Djokovic said Russia was a global power in
international sport but the scandal had been damaging for all
involved.
"I don’t want to make any kind of stance there because I don’t have
adequate details about that case, but at least to some extent I’m
glad there are some Russian athletes being part of the Games,"
Djokovic told reporters on Wednesday.
"To hear and to read about what was happening in the last couple of
months was definitely from an athlete perspective not good; not
(good) for Russia, not good for international sport, not good for
Olympic games."
Djokovic's relief that Russian athletes will compete at Rio was in
stark contrast with the view of WADA and many other athletes who
have called for the entire Russian team to be banned from the
Olympics as a punishment for persistent doping.
Djokovic is the top seed for the tennis tournament at Rio, ahead of
defending champion Andy Murray. The 2008 Beijing gold medal winner
Rafael Nadal has been seeded third.
The Serb said he was surprised that half of the world's top-10 seeds
had pulled out of the tournament, either through injury or health
concerns over the Zika virus.
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Novak Djokovic of Serbia serves to Kei Nishikori of Japan in the
mens final on day seven of the Rogers Cuptennis tournament
at Aviva Centre. Mandatory Credit: Dan Hamilton-USA TODAY
Switzerland's Stan Wawrinka and Roger Federer withdrew because of
injuries while the Czech Republic's Tomas Berdych pulled out citing
concerns over Zika. Other notable absentees include Canadian Milos
Raonic and Austrian Dominic Thiem.
"I wasn’t expecting to see so many players at the top of the tennis
world pull out but each one of them had their own reason and you
gotta respect that," said Djokovic.
He added the withdrawals had not diminished the competition and
winning a gold medal would still require defeating top players such
as Murray or Nadal.
"It would mean the world to me (to win gold)," said Djokovic. "It
would rank as one of the highest achievements in my career."
(Editing by Ed Osmond)
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