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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

The invisible team: Russia at the Games

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Peter Stebbings -


There is a grey door at the Pyeongchang Winter Games media centre with a sign reading ‘Olympic Athletes from Russia’, but it is rarely open and inside there are no Russian flags or colours.


It is a fitting metaphor for the country’s participation in South Korea, where the Russian team is suspended over a doping scandal but 167 of its competitors deemed to be drug-free will take part as ‘Olympic Athletes from Russia’.


Despite officially not competing in the Games, Russia, along with North Korea, has dominated debate in the lead-up to Friday’s opening ceremony.


Russia was suspended from the Games in December over its systemic doping programme, fined $15 million and its former sports minister, Deputy Prime Minister Vitaly Mutko, was banned for life.


Nevertheless, Russians will still make up one of the largest contingents in Pyeongchang, albeit under a neutral flag — which means standing to the Olympic anthem if they win gold, and a strict absence of Russian colours.


Under stringent conditions imposed by the International Olympic Committee (IOC), no Russian tricolours can flutter anywhere in public — not even from apartments in the athletes’ village.


Their social media will be monitored to make sure they call themselves ‘Olympic Athlete from Russia’ or ‘OAR’.


The Russians do, however, have a strong incentive to comply with the rules: the IOC is considering lifting Russia’s suspension in time for the closing ceremony on February 25.


It is all a far cry from four years ago, when Russia hosted the Sochi Winter Olympics and the country soared to the top of the medals table.


But it is that Olympics which helped propel Russia to where they are today at the Olympics: banned and marginalised.


Central to blowing the lid on doping across Russian sport was whistle-blower Grigory Rodchenkov, the former head of Russia’s anti-doping lab.


Rodchenkov, who alleged that Russian President Putin personally ordered the doping programme, fled to the United States in 2016 in fear of his life.


That same year, a report by Canadian lawyer Richard McLaren on behalf of the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) accused Moscow of state-sponsored doping that reached its climax at Sochi.


Russia’s track and field athletes were consequently banned from the 2016 Rio Olympics and the whole team was barred from the Paralympics. They remain suspended from the Pyeongchang Paralympics.


Moscow officials have been united in their fury against Russia’s continued isolation at the highest level of sport.


There was a rare piece of good news last week when the top court for sport, the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS), overturned life bans meted out by the IOC to 28 Russian athletes and staff over doping.


But torpedoing any hopes of a late entry to Pyeongchang, the IOC — who were stunned by the CAS ruling — on Monday said 15 of the 28 would not be invited to South Korea.


The rest of the 28 have either retired or are unavailable for undisclosed reasons.


The number of Russians at Pyeongchang currently stands at 167 “clean” athletes, but on Tuesday CAS said Korean-born speed skater Victor An and 31 other Russian athletes had launched a last-ditch appeal against their suspensions.


The Russians — including officials and coaches — at the Winter Olympics will be closely watched by the IOC to ensure they stick to the rules as neutrals.


An observer group will report back on the final day of the Games to the IOC Executive Board, which could then lift — or partially lift — the suspension of the dope-tainted Russian Olympic Committee.


If that is the case, the Russian flag will flutter once more, during the closing ceremony on February 25.


And, presumably, the grey office door will be marked ‘Russia’ rather than ‘Olympic Athletes from Russia’. —AFP


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