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Kamila Valieva: tears, outrage and a distressing conclusion at the Winter Olympics

  • February 18, 2022
  • Sport

Russian figure skating prodigy Kamila Valieva was controversially cleared to compete in the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics this week, despite testing positive for the banned angina drug trimetazidine. The 15-year-old claimed she must have been contaminated by her grandfather’s heart medication.

When the Russian Anti-Doping Agency (Rusada) was informed of the failed drugs test on 8 February it provisionally suspended her in line with World Anti-Doping Agency (Wada) rules. After Valieva appealed the decision, Rusada agreed to lift the suspension. The International Olympic Committee (IOC), Wada and the International Skating Union then launched an appeal with the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) to reinstate the provisional suspension. 

The winter games descended into “acrimony and farce” after CAS cleared Valieva to compete despite the positive doping test “hanging over her head”, The Guardian said. The court stated there were “exceptional circumstances” surrounding the case, and that banning her while it was ongoing would “cause her irreparable harm”.

The case has drawn “worldwide scrutiny” because of Russia’s doping history, USA Today said. In 2016, Wada found that more than 1,000 Russian athletes were involved in, or benefitted from, a state-sponsored doping program from 2011 to 2015. 

As a nation, Russia is currently banned from competing at the Summer or Winter Olympics. But its athletes are allowed to participate under the Russian Olympic Committee (ROC) flag. 

An ‘asterisk’ next to her results 

Valieva came into the games as the “biggest star in a highly-rated ROC squad”, the BBC said. And the “acclaim grew louder” when she became the first woman to land a quadruple jump at an Olympic Games – doing so in the team event, in which the ROC won gold. However, the medal ceremony was “unusually delayed” after it was revealed Valieva had failed the drugs test in December. 

Cleared to compete in the women’s individual competition, Valieva performed a strong short program on Tuesday and qualified in first place for the final free skate on Thursday, Sky Sports reported. Prior to her final skate, the IOC said the results would be “preliminary” and have an “asterisk” next to them if Valieva finished within the top three. There would also be no medal ceremony, as had been the case for the team event. 

Kamila Valieva with coach Eteri Tutberidze (left) and choreographer Daniil Gleikhengauz 

Xavier Laine/Getty Images 

‘Uncomfortable and unpleasant’

After a week of “outrage” following the failed drugs test, Valieva’s Olympics came to a “distressing conclusion” in the free skate, the BBC said. “In the end it became one of the most uncomfortable, unpleasant moments of sport in recent memory.”

Article source: https://www.theweek.co.uk/news/sport/olympics/955816/kamila-valieva-winter-olympics

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