Rio
Olympics was like a cold war, says Russian Efimova
Send a link to a friend
[August 25, 2016]
By Dmitriy Rogovitskiy
MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russian Yulia
Efimova, who won two Olympic silver medals this month after being
cleared to compete in Rio following a doping ban, has compared
swimming in the Games to being at war.
Initially excluded from the event because of her doping record, the
24-year-old won a last-minute legal challenge to the Court of
Arbitration for Sport (CAS) and finished second in the 100 and 200
meters breaststroke in Brazil.
"I felt under pressure from the sportsmen, the fans, the press. This
was awful and it was not like being at an Olympics, which usually
unites people. This was not a competition, but a war - a сold war,"
Efimova told a news conference on Wednesday.
The four-times world champion announced in March that a doping test
had shown she had taken the banned drug Meldonium and she was
subsequently banned from all competitions.
But Efimova was cleared in July after the World Anti-Doping Agency
(WADA) acknowledged there was a lack of scientific evidence over how
long Meldonium takes to be excreted from the body.
"The fact that my doping tests were taken abroad really helped me to
compete in the Olympics," Efimova said. "If they had been taken in
Russia, then this would have been a harder question."
Efimova was disqualified from swimming for 16 months in 2014 after
traces of the anabolic steroid DHEA, which speeds up metabolism and
helps with weight loss, were found in her system at an out of
competition test in Los Angeles in 2013.

RIO JEERS
In Rio, she was jeered by the crowd and her main rivals, Americans
Lily King and Katie Meili, refused to congratulate her on winning a
silver medal in the 100 breaststroke.
"Of course, it was difficult for me in Brazil. A few people with
whom I used to get on with well, now won't even say hello to me or
will just look at me in a strange way," Efimova said.
"In terms of King and Meili, I only saw how they behaved on a
recording. This was really unsporting behavior. I understand that
King is still young, but people should not behave like that. Then
she tried to say sorry. I do not hold any grudges against anyone,"
Efimova added.
She believes the pressure put on Russia will only increase after the
Olympics. Of the 387 Russian sportsmen and women who were named in
the preliminary squad, only 271 were able to compete in Rio.
[to top of second column] |

Russia's Olympic medalist Yulia Efimova, who won silver medals for
Women's Swimming 100m and 200m Breaststroke, attends a news
conference in Moscow, Russia August 24, 2016. REUTERS/Maxim Zmeyev

The country's track and field athletes and weightlifters were barred
over doping offences and only a handful of rowers were allowed to
take part in the Games.
"It is a difficult situation. You can see what is happening - Russia
has not been allowed to compete in the Paralympics. I think that at
the Winter Olympics (in 2018 in Pyongchang), this pressure will be
even greater."
Efimova has lived in California since 2011 where she was coached by
American Dave Salo but she plans to leave the United States soon.
"He (Salo) is one of the best coaches in the world and especially in
breaststroke," Efimova said.
"Now they have banned him from training me. I heard that all our
international team will not be trained by him. Therefore, I do not
see a point in staying as I was only in the U.S. because of Salo.
There are a lot of countries and clubs that have invited me to train
with them."
Efimova still dreams of winning an Olympic gold medal.
"I want to compete at the Olympics in Tokyo. I am even more
motivated than I have ever been before," she said.
(Editing by Ed Osmond)
[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
 |