WADA was not equipped to handle
size of Russian doping scandal -Reedie
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[November 06, 2019]
By Karolos Grohmann
KATOWICE, Poland (Reuters) - Outgoing
World Anti-Doping Agency president Craig Reedie said on Tuesday the
scale and size of the Russian doping scandal that erupted in 2015
had overwhelmed his organization at the time.
Speaking at the World Conference on doping in sport, Reedie said the
Russian doping affair that emerged ahead of the 2016 Rio de Janeiro
Olympics and saw the involvement of a vast number of athletes,
coaches and officials was the biggest challenge WADA had faced in
its 20-year existence.
"The worst case of system failure in my time as president of WADA or
in the entire time of the anti-doping movement is Russia," Reedie
told the conference.
He said the level of cheating was "unprecedented," leaving WADA
under mounting pressure to work for all clean athletes as the
Russian anti-doping agency (RUSADA) was declared non-compliant.
"What it (scandal) taught us when it erupted was that we were not
equipped to deal with such a large-scale programme," Reedie said.
RUSADA was suspended after the 2015 WADA report found evidence of
state-sponsored doping in Russian sport and the country was barred
from the Rio de Janeiro Olympics the following year.
All Russian athletes also competed as independents at the 2018
Pyeongchang Winter Olympics.
RUSADA's suspension was lifted in September 2018 amid strong
criticism as WADA gradually got access to key Russian athletes' data
from the Russian lab.
But in September WADA said it had again opened compliance
proceedings against RUSADA after finding "inconsistencies" in the
vast bank of historical testing data finally handed over in January.
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Craig Reedie, President of the World Anti Doping Agency (WADA)
attends the WADA Symposium in Ecublens, near Lausanne, Switzerland,
March 21, 2018. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse/File Photo
That means RUSADA are again at risk of being declared non-compliant
and thus putting Russia's participation at the Tokyo Olympics next
year at risk.
Reedie did not say when a decision on the matter would be taken.
He later told a news conference he thought there would be no repeat
of the situation before the 2016 Olympics where it was unclear which
Russian athletes were eligible and which were not as dozens of legal
appeals were made over the ban.
"I am pretty confident that in the short term - you mentioned Tokyo
2020 - a repetition of that situation is unlikely," said Reedie, who
will be replaced by Poland's sports minister Witold Banka on Jan. 1.
"I think we are better at spotting these issues. We have better
company structures, and we know much more about the business," said
Reedie, who is also an IOC member.
(Reporting by Karolos Grohmann; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan and
Hugh Lawson)
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