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Opinion: In latest farce, International Olympic officials again favoring Russia over clean athletes

  • December 09, 2019
  • Sport

Olympic movement officials want you to know they are outraged at Russia’s latest efforts to cheat the system.

Not outraged enough to actually do anything, of course. But outraged nonetheless.

The World Anti-Doping Agency voted unanimously Monday to ban Russia from international sports for four years as punishment for doping. That means no Tokyo Olympics next summer, no Beijing Games, no World Cup in 2022.

Read the fine print, though, and you’ll see the decision is a smokescreen, more kowtowing to Russia at the expense of clean athletes. This is not the blanket ban that athletes and many who actually care about fighting doping had called for, but rather a farce that allows Russia to compete in all of the biggest events, albeit without its flag and anthem.

“I would have preferred to support a blanket ban today,” Linda Hofstad Helleland, WADA’s vice president, said in a speech to the body Monday. “Unless we impose sanctions that really wake Russian leaders up, hold them accountable and make them acknowledge the facts – how can we be sure that the system will ever change?”

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In this photo taken Feb. 24, 2014, Russia President Vladimir Putin (center) poses for a photo with Russian athletes, winners of the Sochi 2014 Winter Olympics.

The short answer: It won’t. And why should it, when Russia can continue to make anti-doping and Olympic leaders look like suckers without there being any real consequences for it?  

Technically, Russia also was banned from the Pyeongchang Olympics in 2018, with athletes who could “prove” they were clean competing instead as “Olympic Athletes from Russia.” The Russian flag was not raised when they won medals, and the Russian anthem was not played when they won gold.

But that didn’t fool anyone. And it certainly didn’t dissuade Russia from cheating.

As part of a deal to get back in the Olympic movement’s good graces following discovery of a widespread, state-sponsored doping program that ensured it would win the medal count in Sochi, Russia was to turn over raw data from its Moscow lab by Dec. 31, 2018. The data would be used to corroborate prior doping cases, and ensure that the Russian athletes who’d been allowed to compete after the Sochi scandal was uncovered were actually clean.

Not only did Russia blow the deadline by two weeks, but WADA found that someone in the Moscow laboratory was still tampering with the data into 2019. The manipulation was meant, in part, to cover up the Russian government’s role in the scandal and instead place the blame solely on Grigory Rodchenkov, the architect of the doping program who has since turned whistle blower.

As if that wasn’t shady enough, WADA said the tampering will prevent it from pursuing cases against as many as 145 athletes. So that “Olympic Athletes from Russia” team that will be in Tokyo? Who knows how many of them will actually be clean.

But heaven forbid Russia should actually be punished. That Olympic and anti-doping officials should actually impose sanctions that send a clear message to President Vladimir Putin and his henchmen that their shenanigans to undermine international sport will no longer be tolerated.

Human nature being what it is, there will always be doping in sports as athletes look for any kind of edge. No country, including the United States, is immune, as Lance Armstrong and Marion Jones showed us.

But those were individual athletes. This was a sophisticated doping program imagined and implemented by officials at the highest levels of the Russian government.

And almost six years after Sochi, they’re still at it. If that doesn’t merit a complete ban, what will?

This isn’t just about Russia flouting the rules. It’s about the hundreds of athletes who resist the temptation to take shortcuts, who believe in the ideals of fair play. Sure, some of them eventually get their medals, but they can never get back their moment to celebrate a lifetime’s worth of sweat and sacrifice when the whole world is watching.

“We maintain that the fraud, manipulation and deception revealed to date will only be encouraged and perpetuated” without a total ban, members of WADA’s Athletes Committee said in a statement Sunday.

“We believe that until these critical abuses of integrity in sport are confronted with courage and a resolute commitment to protect athletes and clean sport, they will continue, and the sports we love remain tarnished.”  

Russia spent $51 billion on the Sochi Games. But the real cost was the Olympic movement’s integrity. 

Follow USA TODAY Sports columnist Nancy Armour on Twitter @nrarmour. 

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