Russia banned from Olympics but
door open to Tokyo Games
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[December 10, 2019]
By Steve Keating
(Reuters) - Russia may be banned from
the next two Olympics but the door is open for Russian participation
at the 2020 Tokyo Summer Games if athletes can meet the rigid
criteria laid out by the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA).
The road to the Olympics may not be as straightforward after Russia
was on Monday banned by WADA for four years from the world's top
sporting events for tampering with doping tests.
Russians nonetheless have a path to competing at the Tokyo Games as
neutrals under the Olympic flag if they can demonstrate they are
clean and meet conditions set by WADA.
With the Tokyo Olympics a little over seven months away, just how
many Russian athletes will meet their event's qualifying standards
and the WADA criteria is unclear.
It is, however, likely that Russia's Tokyo contingent will be much
smaller than for previous Summer Games.
At the 2012 London Olympics, the last Summer Games Russia contested
without a doping scandal hanging over their participation, a team of
436 athletes was sent.
Four years later at the 2016 Rio Olympics, with Russia embroiled in
the same doping controversy that contributed to Monday's four-year
ban, only 282 were invited.
In Brazil, Russians were allowed to compete under their own flag
after the International Olympic Committee (IOC) rejected a blanket
ban, leaving it up to individual sports federations to determine
which athletes were clean.
For Tokyo that determination will be made by WADA who will lay out a
uniform criteria that must be met across all sports.
"There may be particular aspects unique to certain games/sports but
any criteria would have to be approved by WADA," the anti-doping
agency said in an email to Reuters.
A final decision, though, may rest with the Court of Arbitration for
Sport (CAS), which will hear appeals submitted by athletes who
believe they have been unfairly prevented from competing in Tokyo.
TOKYO DOUBTS
The prospect of seeing Russian track and field athletes in Tokyo is
doubtful, however.
World Athletics, formerly known as the IAAF, last month halted
reinstatement procedures for Russia's suspended athletics federation
after its president and six others were provisionally banned for
serious breaches of anti-doping rules.
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An exterior view of Tokyo Aquatics Centre, the venue for Tokyo 2020
Olympic and Paralympic Games swimming and diving events, in Tokyo,
Japan, November 21, 2019. REUTERS/Jack Tarrant
The IAAF has since 2016 allowed some Russians to compete
internationally as neutrals if they could demonstrate that they were
training in a doping-free environment. But the sport's governing
body is now reviewing how this process works.
That could mean more bad news for Russia, possibly ruling out gold
medal contenders such as top-ranked high jumper Mariya Lasitskene
who was cleared to compete at the world championships in September
where she won a third title.
Russians who have qualified for the Tokyo Games in some team sports
could be excluded in the face of WADA scrutiny.
The drop in the number of Russians eligible to compete at the
Olympics has not surprisingly been coupled with a fall down the
medal table for the neutral athletes in overall terms.
Prior to the doping scandal Russia had been an Olympic powerhouse
fighting for top spot in the table.
At the 2014 Sochi Winter Games hosted by Russia, the country topped
the standings with 29 medals overall and 11 gold.
Last year at the Pyeongchang Winter Olympics, where Russians
competed as neutral athletes, they slipped to 13th with just two
golds and 17 medals overall.
After two Olympics where Russian athletes' doping history was as
crucial as their competitive resume, having to compete under a
neutral flag does not carry the same burden it did, with some
Russian sports officials having got used to the sanction.
"I think this is not a catastrophe for Russian sport," Dmitry
Svishchev, president of Russia’s curling federation, told Reuters.
"We will be (competing) either under the Russian Olympic Committee
flag or as neutrals.
"We have gone through this before at the last Olympics. There is
nothing horrible about this."
(Additional reporting Brian Homewood and Gabrielle Tétrault-Farber;
Editing by Ken Ferris)
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