Russian team in shock over Games doping scandal

Russian team in shock over Games doping scandal

by Joseph Anthony
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Curling is considered the least taxing and physically demanding sport

A Russian Olympic medallist has left the Pyeongchang Winter Games on suspicion of doping, a team official said on Monday, in a scandal that has shocked his teammates and could imperil Russiaโ€™s efforts to regain full Olympic status.

Alexander Krushelnitsky, who competes in curling, one of the Gamesโ€™ least physically taxing sports, is suspected of testing positive for meldonium, a banned substance that increases blood flow and improves exercise capacity.

Asked for an update on the case, Russian delegation spokesman Konstantin Vybornov told Reuters the athlete had surrendered his Games accreditation and left the Olympic village while awaiting the result of a second sample later on Monday.

He later denied having referred to any individual by name. But Russian womenโ€™s curling coach Sergei Belanov replied to reportersโ€™ questions about Krushelnitsky, dismissing the idea that a โ€œyoung, clever manโ€ would use drugs in a sport where they would produce โ€œno benefitsโ€.

โ€œItโ€™s stupid, but Alexander is not stupid, so I donโ€™t believe it,โ€ Belanov said.

Krushelnitsky won bronze with his wife Anastasia Bryzgalova in mixed-doubles curling in Pyeongchang. He has not responded to a request for comment.

Suspicions of a doping violation have rocked the Russian team, which have been trying to draw a line under years of drug-cheating scandals, and shocked the sport of curling, where steady hands and sharp eyes outweigh physical fitness.

โ€œWe were all shocked when we found out yesterday. Of course we very much hope it was some kind of mistake,โ€ Russian curler Viktoria Moiseeva told reporters, adding that the team believed Krushelnitsky was innocent.

โ€œWith us itโ€™s not faster, higher, stronger; itโ€™s about being more accurate. I canโ€™t imagine what kind of drugs you could use in curling โ€ฆ so itโ€™s very hard to believe.โ€

FLAG BAN

Russia has been accused of running a state-backed, systematic doping programme for years, an allegation Moscow denies. As a result, its athletes are competing at Pyeongchang as neutral โ€œOlympic Athletes from Russiaโ€ (OAR), and banned from using their national flag or anthem.

Moiseeva said it would be dreadful if the scandal hurt Russiaโ€™s chances of regaining its full Olympic status for future Games.

โ€œItโ€™s a catastrophe, if itโ€™s not just one Olympics but others too โ€” it will throw sport in our country into turmoil. Itโ€™s awful just to think about, to be honest.โ€

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 the Court of Arbitration for Sport and that a decision would come very quickly after analysis of a B sample.

If confirmed, the violation would be considered by the IOCโ€™s OAR Implementation panel, the body in charge of monitoring the OAR teamโ€™s behaviour at the Games.

โ€œREALLY SADโ€

โ€œI hope itโ€™s not true โ€ฆ for the sport of curling,โ€ said Norwegian team skipper Thomas Ulsrud, whose team would stand to pick up the bronze if the doping result is confirmed.

โ€œIf itโ€™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 arenโ€™t even here.โ€

Russian curling federation president Dmitry Svishchev said Russian curlers had been tested on Jan. 22 before flying out to South Korea and the tests were negative.

โ€œI have known these guys for many years. Only a crazy person takes banned substances before a competition, before the Olympics,โ€ Svishchev said on Sunday night when the news first broke. โ€œItโ€™s a strange story. It raises a lot of questions.โ€

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 world tennis 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.

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