The World Anti-Doping Agency has appealed Russian figure skater Kamila Valieva’s doping case to the Court of Arbitration for Sport and said it is seeking a four-year ban.
Key points:
- Russian figure skater Kamila Valieva was given an exemption to compete at the Beijing Olympics despite testing positive to a banned substance
- Her defence was the test resulted from a mix-up with her grandfather’s medication – RUSADA disqualified her from one day of the national titles
- The World Anti-Doping Agency is seeking a four-year ban, and is appealing to the Court of Arbitration for Sport
WADA is objecting to a finding by a Russian tribunal that Valieva bore “no fault or negligence” in the case, which overshadowed last year’s Beijing Olympics.
WADA wants a four-year ban and for Valieva’s results to be disqualified from the date she gave the sample, December 25, 2021.
That would include the Olympics.
A year after the Beijing Games finished, no medal ceremony has taken place for the team competition because of the uncertainty.
WADA said the Russian decision was “wrong under the terms of the World Anti-Doping Code in this case,” without giving further detail.
In her defence, Valieva said the positive test was the result of a mix-up with her grandfather’s heart medication.
A RUSADA investigation released in January acknowledged that Valieva did fail a drug test but ruled that the teenager was not guilty of any doping infraction.
The Russian skater, who was then 15, won Olympic gold in the team competition in February before it was announced that a sample she gave two months before tested positive for a banned substance, trimetazidine.
The result was reported later because the laboratory that tested the sample was affected by the coronavirus pandemic.
Another CAS panel granted an emergency request for Valieva to be allowed to skate in the women’s competition at the Olympics, in part because of her age.
After the Olympics finished, the Russian anti-doping agency took several months to carry out its own investigation and hold hearings.
WADA tried to refer the case to CAS in November because of the delays before the Russian agency eventually produced a verdict.
WADA, which has received a copy, said the Russian tribunal didn’t impose a ban and only disqualified Valieva from one day of the 2021 Russian national championships, where the sample was taken.
US Figure Skating said this month that it and its skaters, who placed second behind the Russians in the team event, were “deeply frustrated by the lack of a final decision” on the competition results.
The case put a spotlight on Russia’s intensive training system for young skaters and in particular the practices of Valieva’s coach, Eteri Tutberidze, who has worked with a series of champion Russian skaters.
Tutberidze criticised Valieva as she left the ice in the women’s event in Beijing.
Concerns around young skaters’ physical and mental health led the International Skating Union to vote last year to raise the minimum age to compete at the Olympics to 17 in time for the next Winter Games in 2026.
AP/Reuters
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