Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

World

Russia threatens to sue IOC over bobsleigh doping bans

-

Russia's bobsleigh and skeleton federation responded to more Sochi doping bans on Friday by saying they were prepared to take legal action against the International Olympic Committee.

Earlier in the day, the International Olympic Committee annulled the titles Alexander Zubkov won in the two-man and four-man bobsleigh in the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics following hearings by its commission into state-sponsored doping.

That followed punishments announced Wednesday for four Russian skeleton competitors.

"It's possible to communicate with the people who issue their verdicts on the basis of a single computer file produced by a fraud only in the court," said the statement from the Russian bobsleigh federation. "We are set to do that."

The statement indicated that the federation planned to go to the Court for Arbitration for Sport

"Hopefully the CAS will not allow the destruction of the Olympic movement, which is currently happening."

Three other Russian competitors were disqualified retrospectively on Friday: Olga Fatkulina, who won silver in the 500 metres speed skating, and Olga Stulneva (bobsleigh) and Alexander Rumyantsev (speed skating) who did not

A rush of rulings this week means that, in total, the IOC have punished 14 Russian Olympians on the recommendation of a commission headed by Swiss sports official Denis Oswald set up to investigate evidence of state-sponsored doping.

The skeleton competitors were punished on Wednesday included Alexander Tretiakov, the Sochi men's champion, and Elena Nikitina, a bronze medallist, as well as Maria Orlova and Olga Potylitsyna, who did not win medals.

All the guilty athletes have also received a life ban from the Olympics.

Russians have lost nine medals, including four of their 13 golds, from the Games they hosted in February 2014.

Russia finished top of the Sochi medals table but the latest disqualifications mean they have slipped behind Norway (which won 11 golds) and Canada (10 golds).

On Friday, the International Bobsleigh and Skeleton Federation announced that it had provisionally suspended Tretiakov, Nikitina, Orlova and Potylitsyna from its World Cup. It has not yet made an announcement on Zubkov.

In contrast skiing's world governing body the FIS has not taken the same steps against six Russian cross country skiers, including Alexander Legkov, a Sochi gold medalist.

The FIS said on Thursday that the skiers would be provisionally authorised to line up in its World Cup, an announcement that drew outraged reactions from other competitors.

FIS explained the decision by saying they were "obliged to await the official communication of the IOC decision and the evidence behind it, before taking measures."

The IOC responded by telling AFP on Friday that: "All the international federations concerned have received the evidence... They had the chance to participate in the hearings."

The IOC added that on Monday it will publish the details of the first case dealt with by the commission.

The IOC's executive committee meets in Lausanne from December 5-7 to rule on whether to allow Russia to compete in the next Winter Games in Pyeongchang, South Korea, in February.

Russia’s bobsleigh and skeleton federation responded to more Sochi doping bans on Friday by saying they were prepared to take legal action against the International Olympic Committee.

Earlier in the day, the International Olympic Committee annulled the titles Alexander Zubkov won in the two-man and four-man bobsleigh in the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics following hearings by its commission into state-sponsored doping.

That followed punishments announced Wednesday for four Russian skeleton competitors.

“It’s possible to communicate with the people who issue their verdicts on the basis of a single computer file produced by a fraud only in the court,” said the statement from the Russian bobsleigh federation. “We are set to do that.”

The statement indicated that the federation planned to go to the Court for Arbitration for Sport

“Hopefully the CAS will not allow the destruction of the Olympic movement, which is currently happening.”

Three other Russian competitors were disqualified retrospectively on Friday: Olga Fatkulina, who won silver in the 500 metres speed skating, and Olga Stulneva (bobsleigh) and Alexander Rumyantsev (speed skating) who did not

A rush of rulings this week means that, in total, the IOC have punished 14 Russian Olympians on the recommendation of a commission headed by Swiss sports official Denis Oswald set up to investigate evidence of state-sponsored doping.

The skeleton competitors were punished on Wednesday included Alexander Tretiakov, the Sochi men’s champion, and Elena Nikitina, a bronze medallist, as well as Maria Orlova and Olga Potylitsyna, who did not win medals.

All the guilty athletes have also received a life ban from the Olympics.

Russians have lost nine medals, including four of their 13 golds, from the Games they hosted in February 2014.

Russia finished top of the Sochi medals table but the latest disqualifications mean they have slipped behind Norway (which won 11 golds) and Canada (10 golds).

On Friday, the International Bobsleigh and Skeleton Federation announced that it had provisionally suspended Tretiakov, Nikitina, Orlova and Potylitsyna from its World Cup. It has not yet made an announcement on Zubkov.

In contrast skiing’s world governing body the FIS has not taken the same steps against six Russian cross country skiers, including Alexander Legkov, a Sochi gold medalist.

The FIS said on Thursday that the skiers would be provisionally authorised to line up in its World Cup, an announcement that drew outraged reactions from other competitors.

FIS explained the decision by saying they were “obliged to await the official communication of the IOC decision and the evidence behind it, before taking measures.”

The IOC responded by telling AFP on Friday that: “All the international federations concerned have received the evidence… They had the chance to participate in the hearings.”

The IOC added that on Monday it will publish the details of the first case dealt with by the commission.

The IOC’s executive committee meets in Lausanne from December 5-7 to rule on whether to allow Russia to compete in the next Winter Games in Pyeongchang, South Korea, in February.

AFP
Written By

With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

You may also like:

Life

If the government doesn’t think differently about the delivery, it could leave the poorest children and families far behind.

World

Donald Trump doubled down Sunday on hard-line campaign pledges to impose trade tariffs and carry out mass deportations.

World

'I came to see this place that we were banned from, because they wanted us to live in poverty and deprivation,' one Damascus resident,...

World

Syria's rebel leader hailed a "historic" victory Sunday from a landmark Damascus mosque.