Whistleblower still carries Olympic dream
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[May 10, 2016]
By Gene Cherry
(Reuters) - Even through all the turmoil
that forced Yuliya Stepanova to flee her native Russia with her husband,
the whistleblower has not given up hope of competing at the Rio Olympics
in August.
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Yuliya Rusanova of Russia competes during the woman's 800 metres
semi-final heat 1 at the IAAF World Championships in Daegu September 2,
2011. REUTERS/Michael Dalder |
Evidence provided by Stepanova and her husband Vitaly, a former
Russian anti-doping agency employee, formed part of an investigation
that led to Russian athletics being suspended from international
competition.
The International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF)
Council will decide on June 17 whether to reinstate Russian
athletics, paving the way for the sports super power to compete in
Rio.
The governing body's council will also act on a request by
Stepanova, who served a two-year doping ban, to run in Rio under the
International Olympic Committee flag and to return to international
competition.
Obviously, the 800 meters runner would not be welcome to run for
Russia.
"It would be a dream come true to be an Olympian, something I had
always hoped to do," Stepanova, with her husband translating, told
Reuters in a telephone interview on Monday.
"If the best place I can get is the last place, I would still be
happy."
Twice daily the 29-year-old trains in the hope that word from the
IAAF and IOC will be positive.
Stepanova asked that her location in the United States not be
disclosed out of fear for her family's safety after her doping
disclosures.
She reached the Olympic qualifying standard last year when Russian
athletes were still eligible to compete and the reactions of her
competitors was mixed.
"Some people said thank you to her," her husband said. "Some people
put their eyes down and walked away, and some people didn't know who
she is."
Stepanova admitted to using performance-enhancing drugs while
competing for Russia, something her husband said regretted.
"She realized she was cheating and she regrets doing it, but she
cannot change the past," he said.
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Opinions differ on whether she should be in Rio.
Travis Tygart, the chief executive of the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency,
said she should be given that opportunity.
"Given her circumstances, it would be unfair not to give her an
avenue to compete," he told Reuters.
"People are not asking for her to be able to run because she stood
up and came forward. She has the qualifying standard and has been
tested regularly."
WADA also said it would not object to her competing again.
However, Kevan Gosper, a leading Olympic official and a member of
the IAAF ethics board, said he was not optimistic about Stepanova
competing under the IOC flag.
“The IOC has had a lot of experience of enabling athletes to take
part in sport if there’s been a breakdown in the administration of
sport or changes by virtue of political issues, war and so on," he
told Reuters at a sports integrity forum in Melbourne on Monday.
"We’ve had no experience of just making way for an individual in
that respect.
“I think everything should be looked at but I wouldn’t be overly
optimistic."
(Additional reporting by Ian Ramson in Melbourne; Editing by Peter
Rutherford)
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