Current:Home > ContactOlympic skater's doping saga drags on with hearing Thursday. But debacle is far from over. -WealthTrail Solutions
Olympic skater's doping saga drags on with hearing Thursday. But debacle is far from over.
View
Date:2025-04-17 18:50:16
The arduous and embarrassing Kamila Valieva Russian doping saga hits its 640th day Thursday — and it’s not anywhere close to being done.
Valieva’s Court of Arbitration for Sport hearing in Lausanne, Switzerland, which abruptly adjourned Sept. 28 when the three-member CAS panel ordered “the production of further documentation,” resumes Thursday and is expected to conclude by Friday.
But no one should expect a decision on Valieva’s guilt or innocence this week, or anytime soon.
A final ruling by the CAS panel is expected to come sometime in the next few months, perhaps in December but much more likely after the holidays in early 2024. If that’s the case, the arbitrators’ decision could come close to marking the two-year anniversary of the team figure skating competition at the Beijing Olympics Feb. 7, 2022, when Russia won the gold medal, the United States won the silver medal and Japan won the bronze.
The following day, those results were thrown into disarray when Valieva, the then-15-year-old star of the Russian team, was found to have tested positive for the banned substance trimetazidine six weeks earlier at the Russian championships, forcing the unprecedented cancellation of the event’s medal ceremony.
To this day, the athletes from the U.S., Japan and of course Russia still have not received their medals. One of the loveliest and simplest tasks performed in the Olympic world, the presentation of the medals to the athletes who won them, has turned into an international debacle.
Why? Because the sole organization charged with conducting the Valieva investigation, the Russian Anti-Doping Agency — an organization that was suspended from 2015-2018 for helping Russian athletes cheat — dithered and delayed through most of the rest of 2022, setting the process back by months.
“This is a continuation of the travesty that has undermined the confidence that athletes have in the system,” U.S. Anti-Doping Agency CEO Travis Tygart said in an interview Wednesday.
“Justice hasn’t just been denied for the athletes who have been waiting nearly two years now for their medals. Justice has been defeated. The athletes will never be able to replace the moment they would have had on the Olympic medal podium.”
It is believed that the most recent delay — the sudden adjournment of the CAS hearing in late September — was caused by a request by Valieva’s legal team to see documents that had not been originally included in the proceedings but were known to exist.
OPINIONRussian skater's Olympic doping drama delayed again as clown show drags on
“Of course, we all are for full and complete due process,” Tygart said on Sept. 28, “but this reeks of just further manipulation by the Russians and the system has to change to ensure this cannot continue to happen.”
Once the Valieva hearing concludes, the arbitrators will deliberate and write their decision. When that ruling is announced, the International Skating Union, the worldwide governing body for figure skating, will then decide the final results of the 2022 team figure skating competition.
If Valieva, considered a minor or “protected person” under world anti-doping rules because she was 15 at the time, is found to be innocent, the results likely will stand: Russia, U.S., Japan.
If she is deemed guilty, it’s likely the U.S. would move up to the gold medal, followed by Japan with the silver and fourth-place Canada moving up to take the bronze.
When all this will happen, and how the skaters will receive their medals, is anyone’s guess. One idea that has been floated is to honor the figure skating medal winners with a ceremony at the 2024 Paris Olympic Games next summer, but if Russia keeps the gold medal, there is no way that will happen as long as Russia’s war in Ukraine rages on.
One thing we do know is that the next Winter Olympics will be held in Italy beginning Feb. 6, 2026. Presumably, the skaters will have received their medals by then.
veryGood! (6166)
Related
- Kehlani Responds to Hurtful Accusation She’s in a Cult
- 'All American' showrunner is a rarity in Hollywood: A Black woman in charge
- See all the red carpet looks from the 2023 Oscars
- Poetry finally has its own Grammy category – mostly thanks to J. Ivy, nominee
- Boy who wandered away from his 5th birthday party found dead in canal, police say
- Chaim Topol, the Israeli actor known for Tevye of Fiddler on the Roof, has died
- Newly released footage of a 1986 Titanic dive reveals the ship's haunting interior
- What happens when a director's camera is pointed at their own families?
- From family road trips to travel woes: Americans are navigating skyrocketing holiday costs
- 10 pieces of well-worn life advice you may need to hear right now
Ranking
- A New York Appellate Court Rejects a Broad Application of the State’s Green Amendment
- The list of nominations for 2023 Oscars
- What's making us happy: A guide to your weekend reading, listening and viewing
- The U.S. faces 'unprecedented uncertainty' regarding abortion law, legal scholar says
- British golfer Charley Hull blames injury, not lack of cigarettes, for poor Olympic start
- How to watch the Oscars on Sunday night
- At the end of humanity, 'The Last of Us' locates what makes us human
- And the Oscar for best international film rarely goes to ...
Recommendation
Michigan lawmaker who was arrested in June loses reelection bid in Republican primary
Sold an American Dream, these workers from India wound up living a nightmare
'Dear Edward' tugs — and tugs, and tugs — at your heartstrings
Prosecutors file charges against Alec Baldwin in fatal shooting on movie set
Man can't find second winning lottery ticket, sues over $394 million jackpot, lawsuit says
A project collects the names of those held at Japanese internment camps during WWII
Marie Kondo revealed she's 'kind of given up' on being so tidy. People freaked out
George Saunders on how a slaughterhouse and some obscene poems shaped his writing