Exclusive: Two Russian coaches, doctor banned for doping still
active in sport
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[June 06, 2019]
By Gabrielle Tétrault-Farber
KURSK, Russia (Reuters) - Three years
ago, Russian athletics coach Vladimir Mokhnev was banned for 10
years by the Court of Arbitration for Sport, global sport's
over-arching judicial body, for giving prohibited
performance-enhancing drugs to members of the national track team.
Mokhnev, the court ruled, had violated international anti-doping
rules. His name was taken off Russia's national team roster and
added to a list of banned personnel compiled by the World
Anti-Doping Agency (WADA).
"I was banned," Mokhnev, who denied his involvement in doping, said
at a news conference on June 23, 2017. "How can I work?"
On May 16 this year, a Reuters reporter witnessed Mokhnev at an
athletics stadium in the city of Kursk giving instructions to seven
runners, recording their lap times from the side of the track and at
one point coming out onto the track during a warm-up to give
directions to an athlete.
WADA's World Anti-Doping Code - which all signatories including
Russia commit to abide by - states that banned coaches and other
athlete support staff are not allowed to "participate in any
capacity" in a competition or in activities related to elite sport.
Athletes also must not receive training, strategy, nutritional or
medical advice from banned coaches or medical staff and can face
sanctions if they do, according to the code.
However, it is not legally binding under Russian criminal or
administrative law.
The IAAF, global athletics' governing body, meets this weekend in
Monaco where it will discuss the status of Russia's athletics
federation. The body which oversees track and field in the country
has been suspended since 2015 after a probe ordered by WADA found
evidence of widespread doping.
RUSSIAN AGENCY TO INVESTIGATE FINDINGS
Despite the restrictions, Mokhnev and a second athletics coach, also
serving a ban for doping, remain involved in coaching, Reuters has
found.
Russia's athletics federation announced that the other coach, Valery
Volkov, had received a four-year ban for an anti-doping violation
effective from August 2017. He was added to the WADA list of banned
personnel.
In addition, Sergei Portugalov, formerly the athletics federation's
chief medical officer, was banned for life by the Court of
Arbitration for Sport in 2017 for doping violations.
Reuters found that, since then, he has given nutrition and training
advice in lectures at a Moscow gym.
When asked by Reuters about these activities, none of the
individuals, nor the sports bodies overseeing their bans, produced
any evidence that there were exceptions to the bans that apply to
them.
Contacted by Reuters by telephone, Mokhnev said his ban was unjust.
He said he was sometimes asked by coaches to drive athletes to
meets, and, once there, sat and watched.
"I can go where I want," he said. "I can go up to whomever I want.
Or am I a leper? Show me a law that I have violated, a Russian law."
Responding to Reuters questions via his institute's press service,
Volkov said he was aware of the ban but was holding physical
education classes and not training professional athletes.
Portugalov did not respond to requests for comment.
WADA said it would follow up with Russian anti-doping agency RUSADA
and "the relevant international federations" that have jurisdiction
over the individuals to ensure they were aware of the Reuters
findings and that "the allegations are being dealt with
appropriately."
Yuri Ganus, the director of RUSADA, told Reuters it would
investigate the findings.
Russia's athletics federation said the findings made by Reuters had
been sent to RUSADA because they contained "information on possible
anti-doping violations."
The federation said it had called on RUSADA and the sports minister
of the Kursk region to investigate Mokhnev's work with athletes and,
if the Reuters findings were confirmed, to "hold those guilty
responsible."
The International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) did
not respond to a request for comment.
BLOW TO RUSSIAN PRESTIGE
In November 2015, Russia's athletics federation and RUSADA were
suspended over what Dick Pound, who presided over a
WADA-commissioned report into doping in Russian athletics, called
state-sponsored doping.
It was a major setback for a nation with a proud history of global
success in track and field and beyond.
Russia says it has turned over a new leaf and is seeking to retrieve
its status as a full-fledged participant in international sport.
Some critics, including former and current anti-doping officials and
a former world-class athlete contacted by Reuters, counter that
Russia has not truly changed its ways.
Asked to comment on Reuters findings, Travis Tygart, CEO of the U.S.
Anti-Doping Agency (USADA), a signatory to the WADA code, said: "If
true, the world's clean athletes have truly been sold down the river
and the Russians are laughing behind our backs."
Under the WADA code, if someone serving a ban violates it, the
duration of the ban can be doubled. The code does not state what
happens if the person is serving a life ban.
The WADA code establishes anti-doping regulations that must be
followed and enforced by its signatories, including RUSADA.
RUSADA was suspended in 2015 after the WADA-commissioned report said
it warned athletes in advance about testing and its officers
accepted bribes from athletes.
WADA's Executive Committee voted last year to re-instate RUSADA,
saying it had undergone reform. At the time, members of WADA's
Athletes Committee dissented.
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Banned Russian athletics coach Valery Volkov runs a training session
at a university track in Moscow, Russia September 7, 2018.
REUTERS/Staff
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov referred questions to the sports
ministry, which did not respond.
The Athletics Integrity Unit, which oversees integrity issues in
international athletics, including doping, said it did not comment
on specific cases when presented with Reuters' findings.
BANNED, BUT TRACKSIDE
Mokhnev, the banned running coach, instructed Yulia Stepanova, then
an 800-metre runner with the Russian national team, on how to inject
herself with banned blood booster Erythropoietin (EPO), and advised
her on how to avoid detection, according to the WADA-commissioned
report.
In addition to his interaction with athletes in Kursk on May 16,
Mokhnev was also track-side last year at athletics meets in Kursk,
according to a video and photographs posted online by local
athletics followers.
In a photograph that a former local athlete posted on her social
media page, Mokhnev can be seen standing by the track, with a
stopwatch around his neck, next to a runner called Nikolai Bukreyev.
The photograph was taken at a competition in Kursk that ran from May
17 to 18, 2018.
At another competition a few days later at the same track in Kursk,
a city about 500 km south of Moscow, amateur video footage shows
Mokhnev on the track.
In the footage, Mokhnev, who was out of shot at that moment, can be
heard shouting at Bukreyev.
"Come on, come on Kolya!" Mokhnev shouts, using the Russian
diminutive for Nikolai. "Two hundred metres left, go, go! 2:03, what
is that?"
Bukreyev said he would not comment on "false facts", without saying
which facts he deemed false.
The head of the Kursk region's athletics federation, Yevgeny
Shumakov, said Mokhnev had not been coaching but rather offering
advice to athletes from the side of the track.
He said Mokhnev received no pay for working with athletes, but added
that a banned coach turning up at meets was "not okay", although the
federation did not have the power to stop him. "I can't handcuff
him, can I?" he said.
Reuters could not confirm whether Mokhnev has received any payments
for his advice.
COLLEGE COACH
University track coach Volkov was banned for encouraging a female
athlete to refuse a doping test at a 2015 competition in Moscow,
according to the Russian athletics federation.
On two occasions in September last year, Reuters witnessed him
instructing runners at the outdoor track belonging to the Moscow
Power Engineering Institute, a university in the Russian capital.
The institute's website described Volkov as the coach of its
athletics team in October 2017, two months after his ban had taken
effect. The institute later told Reuters that this was down to a
mistake by its press office.
He is now listed on the website as a member of the physical
education faculty, but there is no recent mention of him as coach of
the university team.
During one training session, Volkov instructed a group of about 10
runners as they sprinted around the track. Reuters also witnessed
him massaging an athlete's hamstrings and calves by the track.
The institute said Volkov was conducting physical education classes
with students and did not have contact with professional athletes.
RUSADA head Ganus said the agency could not demand Volkov's firing
because the institute is not a sports organization.
BUSINESS TIES
Portugalov, formerly the athletics federation's chief medical
officer, had provided athletes with banned substances and covered up
their positive tests for a cut of their winnings, according to the
WADA-commissioned report.
Elite athletes who receive medical or nutrition advice from banned
team personnel can face sanctions, according to the WADA code.
Portugalov, who owns a 20% stake in a firm called "Klokov.
Technologies of Sports Training and Recovery", offered medical
advice to a group of about 20 people at a paid lecture organized by
the firm at a Moscow weightlifting gym in December 2018.
He offered advice on how to monitor blood components, and what
nutrition to use for optimal training.
A Reuters reporter attended the lecture.
The firm's executive director, Soviet weightlifter Vyacheslav Klokov,
said Portugalov had officially retired but continued to be called
upon for educational activities related to health, nutrition and
illness prevention.
RUSADA's Ganus said Portugalov's lecturing did not violate
anti-doping regulations because, as far as the agency is aware, he
was giving his audience advice about methods and treatments that are
permitted under anti-doping rules.
(Additional reporting by Anton Zverev, Christian Lowe and Anton
Kolodyazhnyy; Editing by Mike Collett-White and Christian Lowe)
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