From the MT:
“‘We Got What We Deserved’:
Russia Reacts to Doping Ban”
Russia will be banned from
competing in or hosting major world sporting events for four years after the
World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) unanimously ruled that Moscow had tampered with
doping laboratory data. The ruling is the latest blow to Russia’s already
tarnished sporting reputation, which has been hit by scandals since a 2015
report commissioned by WADA found evidence of mass doping in Russian athletics. Here’s a look at what WADA’s
latest ruling means for Russian athletics — and how Russian officials are
reacting:
What it means
— Russia will be banned from the
Olympics and other major world championships and from hosting major sporting
events. Russia will miss:
Summer Olympics 2020 in Tokyo
IAAF World Championships in 2012
Winter Olympics 2022 in Beijing
FIFA World Cup 2022 in Qatar*
Women’s World Cup 2023
Universiade 2021 and 2023 (hosted
in Russia)
*According to FIFA rules, only
national teams can compete in the World Cup. FIFA has yet to comment on the
issue, keeping the door open for Russia.
— Russian athletes who prove to
WADA that they are clean will still be able to compete at major international
sporting events without their flag or anthem, something they did at the 2018 Winter
Olympics in Pyeongchang.
— WADA said that 145 Russian
athletes whose data was manipulated will be banned from competing under any
flag.
— Russian officials will be
barred from attending sporting events and the country will not be allowed to
host them. The ban does not apply to the four matches Russia is hosting next
summer during the European football championship in St. Petersburg, as the
tournament is not considered a “major event.”
— The Russian Anti-Doping Agency
(RUSADA) has 21 days to challenge WADA’s ruling. If RUSADA appeals WADA's
punishment, the case will be referred to the Court of Arbitration for Sport.
— Alexander Ivlev, the chairman
of RUSADA’s supervisory board, said its committee will meet before Dec. 19 to
decide whether to challenge the ruling or not.
How Russia reacted
— Maria Lasitsekne, three-time
World Champion in high-jumping: “Totally not surprised about this outcome.
Today is a very shameful day and I never believed the promises that everything
will be OK. I will continue fighting for my own right to compete, even under a
neutral flag. I am not planning to change my nationality. I am annoyed that
athletes are alone in their fight and the heads of sport in our country are
only willing to defend us on paper.”
— Alexander Tikhonov, four-time
Olympic biathlon champion: “We got what we deserved. We have so many former
athletes in the State Duma, couldn’t they sort out this mess? I am with WADA on
this one.”
— Evgeniy Kafelinkov, Olympic
tennis champion: “There was systemized doping in Russia, I have no doubt about
it. Someone should be punished for it. Russian sport could have restored its
reputation if the people who started it all just went out and said: 'Yes, I
screwed up, please forgive me.' But no one wants to take responsibility for
this. In the end, everything is shifted on the poor athletes.”
— Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev:
"The fact that all these decisions are repeated, and often in relation to
athletes who have already been punished in one way or another ... suggests that
this is a continuation of the anti-Russian hysteria that has already become a
chronic condition."
— Yuri Ganus, the head of RUSADA,
said Russia had "no chance" of winning an appeal against the WADA
decision, calling the four-year ban a "tragedy." Some athletes are
contemplating leaving Russia, Ganus added, describing the sentiments among
athletes as "awful."
— Igor Lebedev, deputy speaker of
the State Duma, said the move was a serious blow to Russian sport that required
a tough response from Russia's authorities.
— Vyacheslav Fetisov, the State
Duma’s special representative for international interparliamentary and sports
development organizations: “I’m very upset about this, personally upset. This
is no longer a negotiation process, the decision has been made. The only option
for us is to go to the arbitration court and look for options. I don’t know
which, since the WADA executive committee’s decision was unanimous.”
— Vasily Titov, the head of the
Russian Olympic summer sports federations: “WADA is trying to drive a wedge between
Russian athletes and the state. This is not about sports, it is purely
politics.”
— Lyubov Sobol, an opposition
politician and lawyer for the Anti-Corruption Foundation (FBK): "The ban
from the Olympic Games and world championships is a total disaster. The blame
should lie personally on Vladimir Putin as the head of our country, and not on
local politicians.”
^ This decision shows a clear
line in the sand that International Sports won’t accept when National Teams
break the rules. If the Russian Government, the Russian Sports Ministries and
Organizations and Russian athletes worked to end the official doping practices
then they can stop trying to play the victim and start competing again. ^
https://www.themoscowtimes.com/2019/12/09/we-got-what-we-deserved-russia-reacts-to-doping-ban-a68526
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.