If Russia is banned from the Olympics, justice will have been done

Pavel Kopachev and Alexei Avdokhin: "All are bound together by doping – that's why all are silent." Photo: Russia's Yelena Isinbayeva celebrates winning the gold medal in the women's pole vault final at the World Athletics Championships.

Pavel Kopachev and Alexei Avdokhin: "All are bound together by doping – that's why all are silent." Photo: Russia's Yelena Isinbayeva celebrates winning the gold medal in the women's pole vault final at the World Athletics Championships.

AP
While much of the Russian media is attempting to deflect attention from the systematic corruption exposed by the doping scandal by blaming politics, Pavel Kopachev and Alexei Avdokhin, journalists for the sports.ru news website, believe that regardless of anything else Russian sports must be thoroughly cleaned up, from the top to the very bottom.

We want, like millions of Russians, to see our best athletes at the Olympics in Rio – track and field athletes Sergei Shubenkov and Yelena Isinbayeva, fighter Bilyal Makhov and tennis player Svetlana Kuznetsova.

We believe that honest athletes should not suffer because of the dishonest. Perhaps, the avalanche of doping scandals involving Russia is 90 percent politics. But the rest is our fault. And it is important to talk about this fault.

Perhaps, now is the best time to change Russian sport. It is a chance given to us by the "bloody West." We must take advantage of this chance – of course, if we understand the scale of our problems.

The Russian sports system is not trusted in the world. And we have deserved such an attitude.

In Russia, athletes caught for doping are not outcasts, but martyrs

Society justifies and even encourages doping athletes in Russia. Race-walking coach Viktor Chegin took medals, received awards, had the state Olympic training center named after him, and all turned a blind eye to the fact that 24 students of the wonderful coach Chegin were caught at different times for doping. Have the athletes and coach returned the awards, prize money or cars received from the state? No, they returned only the "unfair" medals that they wanted to win at any cost.

What's more amusing is that in the midst of a doping scandal, walkers wrote a letter to the Russian president in support of the coach. How should the world have reacted to the fact that Russian athletes supported a coach with such a background?

In Russia, everyone is bound together by doping

The athletes caught for doping deny their guilt, refuse to name anybody and later get a good job or money for their silence. All are bound together by doping – that's why all are silent, there are no investigations, no public criticism. No one breaks this vicious circle. No one wants to become an outcast from the system.

Billions are pumped from the budget into our elite sport. More than 1.5 billion rubles ($23.8 million) was additionally allocated for the preparation of athletes for the Olympics in Rio. The state pays for their fees, accommodation and meals. It gives them apartments, cars, and millions for their victories.

Knowing about the crazy bonuses, athletes are forced to cheat. Doping is a means to achieve success, and there is no alternative to it. Many admit off the record: "This is the main chance, and they promised to solve our problems."

We are very sorry for the athletes who have managed to preserve their "purity," but they were preparing for Rio at the state's expense. Athletes are inseparable from the system. If the government gets punished, all answer for it.

Half measures

The Russian media see only politics in the WADA reports. Yes, it is true to a large extent, but as long as we seek only an external enemy, nothing will change in our sport. It is not Pound, Zeppelt, McLaren or Bach that are guilty of the problems. It is Russian officials who are guilty, with their keenness on looking solely for conspiracies by foreign enemies, while the state ignores the violations within the country.

In 2011, Grigory Rodchenkov was accused of an organized trade in illicit drugs, but he eventually continued to head the anti-doping center and even received an award for the Games in Sochi. When Rodchenkov was needed (and he is a great chemist), the state turned a blind eye to his sins.

When in the fall of 2015, Rodchenkov was accused of destroying almost 1,500 samples, the state did nothing – it just technically removed him from his post. And only when the doctor went to the U.S. and began to work with WADA, and when The New York Times published a sensational investigation, did the Russian Investigative Committee open a criminal case against Rodchenkov. On June 18, six months after the first reports.

And these half measures are everywhere. Even now – after Richard McLaren's sensational report – Deputy Sports Minister Yury Nagorny gets suspended temporarily (and in a demonstrative way), but his direct supervisor – Sports Minister Vitaly Mutko – is in place.

Russian sports: a top with no base

Some may find it blasphemous, but the probability of missing the Olympics is a good opportunity to look at Russian sports with different eyes.

Elite professional sport is just the tip of the pyramid. Much more important is what beneath it: the interest of the audience, accessible fields and gyms, free sports clubs, knowledgeable coaches and large scale involvement. When the pyramid has no base, medals and victories are not the logical outcome of the built system but the sole goal which should be achieved at all costs.

As for doping... It's high time to decide – should we fight it or merely put on a semblance of a fight?

Pavel Kopachev and Alexei Avdokhin are journalists for the sports.ru news website.

The article has been abridged. The full version in Russian is available on the sports.ru website.

The opinion of the writer may not necessarily reflect the position of RBTH or its staff.

Read more: WADA: Sochi anti-doping laboratory used unique method of sample swapping>>>

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