Athletes urge WADA to use influence in Sochi doping probe | CBC Sports - Action News
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Athletes urge WADA to use influence in Sochi doping probe

Athletes around the world are calling on the World Anti-Doping Agency to use its influence to ensure Russians be banned from this summer's Olympics if there's no guarantee they are clean.

Canadian gold medallist Beckie Scott outlined 4-part list of requests

Olympic gold medallist Beckie Scott said athletes want an expanded investigation into Russian sports, beyond track and field, and they want to know that when they line up in Brazil later this year, they'll be competing against clean athletes. (Frank Gunn/Canadian Press)

Olympic gold medallist Beckie Scott gave a speech Thursday that reminded all the leaders at the World Anti-Doping Agency why they're doing all this work.

Scott, the Canadian cross-country skier whose gold-medal celebration came years after the race because a doper beat her, told WADA's foundation board that athletes want the agency to use its influence to ensure Russia won't compete at the upcoming Olympics if there's no guarantee they're clean.

Scott said athletes want an expanded investigation into Russian sports, beyond track and field, and they want to know that when they line up in Brazil later this year, they'll be competing against clean athletes.

"We put this call out in November, and were deeply disappointed with the lack of decisive action and follow-up," said Scott, who gave a similar speech at WADA's last big meeting, only to be rebuffed by agency leadership.

Scott, the chair of the WADA athletes committee, said athletes understood the "utter, complete implausibility of (Russia's doping system) being in place to just service track and field."

"That the doping was so widespread and nothing was done is almost incomprehensible to the athletes' community," she said.

This week, WADA agreed to investigate allegations, delivered by whistleblowers Vitaly and Yulia Stepanov, that four gold medallists from the Sochi Olympics used steroids.

But before that revelation, the Russian investigation had focused on track and field, even though the leader of the investigation, Dick Pound, made it clear in his report that cheating wasn't confined to one sport.

4-item list

Scott outlined a four-item list of requests from athletes around the world, including that WADA use its influence to ban Russia from the Olympics.

Also on the list: immediate penalties for those who violate anti-doping code in extraordinary cases; sanctions for serious noncompliance; and better methods to take care of whistleblowers.

Scott said she understands that it's track's governing body, not WADA, that has final say on whether Russia's track team competes at the Rio Olympics. The IAAF will meet next month to determine Russia's future. But, Scott said, WADA can shape decisions and needs to use that power with respect to Rio.

She criticized WADA's slow-moving investigation process, one the leadership is trying to improve.

The Stepanovs sent dozens of emails to WADA from 2010-2014 but no action was taken until the information was given to a German TV network.

"If we don't lead investigations, and not just follow up on TV programs, if we don't sanction, we lose athletes' belief in the system and lose the belief that winning clean is possible," Scott said.