Figure skating: Russia's Valieva shows up for practice again in Beijing


1 photo
Save Story
Leer en español

Estimated read time: 4-5 minutes

This archived news story is available only for your personal, non-commercial use. Information in the story may be outdated or superseded by additional information. Reading or replaying the story in its archived form does not constitute a republication of the story.

BEIJING — Russia's figure skating teenage sensation Kamila Valieva took to the ice on Friday again at the Beijing Olympics as reports of her testing positive for a banned substance cast a shadow over her winning performance in the teams event, with the medal ceremony being delayed.

The Russian Olympic Committee skaters won the team event on Monday, but the medal ceremony was delayed for legal reasons, with Russian media reporting Valieva had failed a drug test.

Valieva, who had already practiced at the rink adjacent to the Capital Indoor Stadium on Thursday, is still scheduled to take part in the women's single event on Tuesday.

The female figure skaters of ROC have another training slot available on Friday, which they are free to skip.

Her hair in a bun, Valieva wore a forest green long-sleeved shirt, black tights under padded shorts as she skated some of her programme in one sequence with music.

With Maurice Ravel's Bolero resounding through the Capital Indoor Stadium, the 15-year-old seemed to think she was supposed to run through her short programme, prompting one of her coaches, Gleikhengauz, to tell her to move to the centre of the ice to rehearse her free skate.

Valieva did not skate a full run through of her free programme, but began to execute quadruple jumps with only a few minutes left for practice.

She then walked straight towards the dressing room in skate guards, not reacting to a reporter shouting "Kamila! Kamila!".

Valieva appeared some 25 minutes after fellow Russia skaters Alexandra Trusova and Anna Shcherbakova, the world champion, under the eyes of coaches Eteri Tutberidze, Sergei Dudakov and Daniil Gleikhengauz.

Valieva was part of the team who won the figure skating team event, ahead of the United States and Japan. But their medal ceremony was delayed for unexplained "legal consultations", the International Olympic Committee said without providing further details.

Russian athletes are already competing without their flag and anthem because of sanctions for past doping violations.

Russian media reported Valieva had returned a positive test, with newspapers RBC and Kommersant naming the drug as Trimetazidine, which is typically used to treat angina.

The ROC and Russian figure skating federation have not commented.

RODCHENKOV ACT

On Friday a spokesperson for the U.S. Olympic and Paralymic Committee said: "The reality is that we don't know much beyond the speculation at this point - and we aren't in a place to provide further comment until we know more."

The World Anti-Doping Agency told Reuters it would be informed of a positive test if there was a case.

"We receive the decisions/outcomes of all first-instance anti-doping cases, which are then reviewed to ensure they have been handled in line with the World Anti-Doping Code," it said in a statement.

Valieva's case is complicated by her age as according to WADA's world anti-doping code, athletes who commit doping violations should be publicly named, but this is not required if the person is a minor under 18.

Adding to the potential legal implications of the situation, Travis Tygart, the chief of the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency said that the Rodchenkov Anti-Doping Act, which allows American authorities to prosecute foreign athletes or officials beyond the borders of the United States should be used for the Beijing Olympics if U.S. competitors are affected.

"I think all those who value clean sport would absolutely be advocating for that (application of the Rodchenkov act)," Tygart told Reuters Television on Friday.

"Many of us were disappointed in the initial state sponsored doping (in Russia) that was exposed back in 2015, that those who orchestrated and conspired to abuse young athletes... were not held accountable by their sport or their own governments.

Katarina Witt, one of the sport's greats, offered her support to Valieva, pointing her finger at the teenager's entourage.

"As an athlete, you always follow the advice of your confidants, in this case she probably followed her coach and medical team," Witt, who won Olympic gold for East Germany in 1984 and 1988, said.

"It is a shame, and the responsible adults should be banned from the sport forever!!! What they knowingly did to her, if true, cannot be surpassed in inhumanity and makes my athlete's heart cry infinitely."

Photos

Most recent Olympics stories

Related topics

National SportsOlympics
Gabrielle Tétrault-Farber and Iain Axon
    KSL.com Beyond Series

    KSL Weather Forecast

    KSL Weather Forecast
    Play button