Russian team in shock over Games doping scandal
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[February 19, 2018]
By Mark Trevelyan and Gabrielle Tetrault-Farber
GANGNEUNG, South Korea (Reuters) -
Russian athletes and sports officials voiced disbelief on Monday
that one of their Winter Games medalists was being investigated for
suspected doping, a scandal that could imperil Russia's efforts to
regain full Olympic status.
Alexander Krushelnitsky, who competes in curling, one of the Games'
least physically taxing sports, is suspected of testing positive for
meldonium, a banned substance that increases blood flow and improves
exercise capacity.
"It's stupid, but Alexander is not stupid, so I don't believe it,"
Russian women's curling coach Sergei Belanov said.
He echoed a general bewilderment among curling athletes who could
not fathom why anyone would use drugs that aid endurance in a sport
that is a kind of chess on ice, needing steady hands and
concentration rather than physical fitness.
Krushelnitsky, who won bronze with his wife Anastasia Bryzgalova in
mixed-doubles curling in Pyeongchang, has not responded to a request
for comment.
The Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) has launched a doping
procedure against him, but no hearing date has been fixed.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters on a conference call
in Moscow that it was too early to draw conclusions about the
ongoing probe.
Russian delegation spokesman Konstantin Vybornov told Reuters that
Krushelnitsky had surrendered his Games accreditation and left the
Olympic village while awaiting the result of a second sample later
on Monday.
The suspected doping violation has come at a delicate time for
Russia which is trying to draw a line under years of drug-cheating
scandals and is competing at Pyeongchang as neutral athletes, unable
to use their own flag or national symbols.
(For a graphic on Olympic medals stripped from Russian winners click
http://tmsnrt.rs/2BDczMb)
"We were all shocked when we found out yesterday. Of course we very
much hope it was some kind of mistake," Russian curler Viktoria
Moiseeva told reporters, adding that the team believed Krushelnitsky
was innocent.
"With us it's not faster, higher, stronger; it's about being more
accurate. I can't imagine what kind of drugs you could use in
curling ... so it's very hard to believe."
FLAG BAN
Russia has been accused of running a state-backed, systematic doping
program for years, an allegation Moscow denies. As a result, its
athletes are competing at Pyeongchang as neutral "Olympic Athletes
from Russia" (OAR).
Russia's curling federation told Reuters on Monday it had launched
an internal investigation of the doping case.
[to top of second column] |
Olympic Athletes from Russia v Norway - Gangneung Curling Center -
Gangneung, South Korea – February 13, 2018 - Alexander
Krushelnitsky, an Olympic athlete from Russia, sweeps. Picture taken
February 13, 2018. REUTERS/Cathal McNaughton
"The federation is now creating an emergency commission in which all
information will be investigated and verified. We know that our
athlete is not guilty," federation president Dmitry Svishchev said.
He had earlier said that Russian curlers were tested on Jan. 22
before arriving in South Korea and the tests were negative.
Moiseeva said it would be dreadful if the case hurt Russia's chances
of regaining full Olympic status for future Games.
"It's a catastrophe, if it's not just one Olympics but others too -
it will throw sport in our country into turmoil. It's awful just to
think about, to be honest."
The Russians had been hoping that a clean record at Pyeongchang
would persuade the International Olympic Committee (IOC) to allow
them to march at the closing ceremony on Feb. 25 with the Russian
flag and in national uniform.
The IOC said on Monday that any doping violation would be decided by
CAS and that a decision would come very quickly after analysis of a
B sample.
If confirmed, the violation would be considered by the IOC's OAR
Implementation panel, the body in charge of monitoring the OAR
team's behavior at the Games.
"REALLY SAD"
"I hope it's not true ... for the sport of curling," said Norwegian
skipper Thomas Ulsrud, whose team would stand to pick up the bronze
if the doping result is confirmed.
"If it's true I feel really sad for the Norwegian team who worked
really hard and ended up in fourth place and just left for Norway
and they aren't even here."
The World Anti-Doping Agency banned meldonium with effect from
January 2016, deeming it performance-enhancing because it enabled
users to carry more oxygen to muscle tissue, something of benefit to
endurance athletes in particular.
Former tennis world number one Maria Sharapova of Russia was barred
from competition for 15 months after testing positive. In total,
more than 170 athletes, including over 40 Russians, have tested
positive for the drug since it was banned.
(Additional reporting by Steve Keating in Gangneung, Karolos
Grohmann in Pyeongchang and Andrew Osborn in Moscow; Editing by Mark
Bendeich and Ed Osmond)
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