Trusted allies: why Putin won't fire sports minister over doping
scandal
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[July 21, 2016]
By Denis Pinchuk and Dmitriy Rogovitskiy
MOSCOW (Reuters) - President Vladimir
Putin risks personal humiliation if all Russian competitors are
banned from the Rio Olympics over doping, as now seems possible; yet
the man on whose watch this may happen, Sports Minister Vitaly
Mutko, is not being fired.
The reason: Mutko has delivered victories on the sports field for
the past decade and a half to match Putin's ambition of restoring
national pride, and the Russian leader stands by the people who give
him loyal service.
"Putin trusts him. Putin knows you can work with Mutko," said
Mikhail Amosov, who had dealings with both men when they worked in
the mayor's office in St Petersburg in the 1990s.
Putin's patience with his subordinate is undergoing its severest
test this week after an independent report alleged that Mutko's own
deputy was a lynchpin in a program to facilitate doping by covering
up athletes' positive test results.
The International Olympic Committee, reacting to the report, said on
Tuesday it would consider barring Russia from taking part in the Rio
games in any disciplines; a step that would be unprecedented in
international sport.
The Court of Arbitration in Sport cleared the path for a blanket ban
on Russian competitors going to Rio when it rejected an appeal on
Thursday against the earlier exclusion of Russian track-and-field
athletes from the games.
Nevertheless, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Mutko was not
among sports officials set to lose their jobs because he was "not
mentioned in the ... report as a direct perpetrator".
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Putin's decision to stand by his minister suggests he values trust
and loyalty above narrow definitions of managerial competence.
"Putin does not change and does not surrender 'his' guys," said a
second person who worked with both men in the St Petersburg mayor's
office and did not want to be identified discussing sensitive
topics.
SOCCER PROJECT
Reuters spoke altogether to six people who worked with Mutko over
the years; they described a fast-talking fixer who got things done
and had a knack for taking run-down sporting institutions and giving
them a touch of success and glamor.
In the early 1990s Putin worked as a deputy mayor in his native St
Petersburg, Russia's second city. Mutko was another deputy mayor,
responsible for social spending.
Another colleague from the mayor's office said that at the time
Mutko did little to distinguish himself from other mid-level
bureaucrats.
"He was a hard worker, but did not particularly take initiative,"
said the former colleague, who did not want to be identified
discussing people who are now in positions of power.
While in the mayor's office, Mutko started a project that would
define his career. He took under his wing St Petersburg’s Zenit
football club. It had fallen on hard times; it had little money and
results on the pitch were poor.
Mutko was club president from 1997 until 2003, and in that period he
found money, attracted star players and returned Zenit to the top
flight of Russian soccer.
Alexei Igonin, Zenit's captain in the early 2000s, said Mutko was a
hands-on president. Players did not use agents because they would
negotiate their deals directly with Mutko.
"He has charisma and speaks well, while he mixes in the right
circles and gets the contacts he needs," said Igonin.
Mutko's success at Zenit caught the eye of Putin, who had become
Russian president in 1999.
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"To make Zenit a good soccer club was Mutko's project," said Amosov,
who was a member of the St Petersburg legislature in the 1990s and
has since became an outspoken Putin critic. "Putin appreciated his
performance and took him to Moscow, a move Mutko never desired. It
seems to me Putin decided that Mutko can do a lot for Russian sport
in general, after doing a lot for Zenit."
In 2005, Mutko became head of the Russian Football Union, and set
about making changes in the same energetic way he had in St
Petersburg.
Vyacheslav Koloskov, the man he replaced, recalled how Mutko took
away the company car, the office and pension that he was still
enjoying at the union's expense.
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Russian President Vladimir Putin (C) and Sports Minister Vitaly
Mutko (L) watch the cross country skiing men's relay during the
Sochi 2014 Olympic Winter Games at Laura Cross-Country Ski and
Biathlon Center near Krasnaya Polyana, Russia, February 16, 2014.
Sputnik/Kremlin/Mikhail Klimentyev/via REUTERS/File Photo
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Afterwards, said Koloskov, "I met him at different committees and
conferences, but he never needed my help and advice, as he always
believed he knew everything".
At the football union, Mutko laid the groundwork for Russia's
successful bid to host the 2018 soccer World cup.
GAFFES
In 2008, Putin made Mutko sports minister, calculating he would
bring the success he had achieved in soccer to other sports. In this
higher-profile job, Mutko made some gaffes.
Government auditors queried how he was able to spend 4,800 Canadian
dollars ($3,680) on breakfasts at his hotel during the 2010 Winter
Olympics in Vancouver. He said he was assigned the hotel by
organizers, so had no control over the costs.
In the same year, Mutko was mocked by many Russians on social media
for a speech to FIFA, world soccer's governing body, in
thickly-accented and halting English.
For Mutko's 57th birthday last year, Putin ribbed him about his
language skills by publicly presenting him with an English
phrase-book.
Still, Mutko's stock stayed high at home, largely because Russia's
international sporting performances improved dramatically under his
stewardship. Those successes boosted Putin's agenda of a strong,
powerful and resurgent Russia.
The high point was the 2014 Winter Olympics in the Russian resort of
Sochi, when Russia topped the medal table and won 13 gold medals.
Four years earlier in Vancouver, they had come 11th and picked up
only three golds.
That success was achieved, on the evidence of this week's report
commissioned by the World Anti-Doping Agency, because Russian
sporting officials set out to win at any cost, even if it meant
cheating.
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DOPING COVER-UP
The report alleged Mutko's ministry directed a system for covering
up positive doping test results. This involved entering false
results into computer records to make them appear clean or, during
the Sochi Games, physically replacing "dirty" urine samples with
clean urine stockpiled in advance.
The report, commissioned by the World Anti-Doping Agency, said it
had email evidence that on one occasion, Mutko personally ordered a
cover up of a positive result for a foreign footballer playing in
the Russian league.
On the evidence of the former head of Russia's anti-doping
laboratory, who testified for the report, it is "inconceivable
Minister Mutko was not aware of the doping cover up scheme", the
report said.
Mutko's office did not respond to a request for comment submitted by
Reuters. Russia's R-Sport news agency quoted Mutko as saying there
were no allegations directed at him, nor could there be, and he was
devoted to fighting doping.
A source who worked closely with Mutko since he became sports
minister offered an explanation of how he is holding on.
"I think it's something to do with the political system in Russia.
When your people are being attacked, Putin will protect those people
whom he appointed and trusted for so long."
(Additional reporting by Jack Stubbs; Writing by Christian Lowe;
Editing by David Stamp)
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