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Will CAS's Simona Halep decision affect the Valieva case?
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From what I can tell, Halep was able to point to a specific supplement as plausibly contaminated. Valieva would need to supply a plausible source of contamination, and currently all her sources are very implausible.Will CAS's Simona Halep decision affect the Valieva case?
I would be surprised if it did. It seems that in her case they found that she had a plausible argument for unintentional doping through a contaminated supplement. In contrast, part of the justification cited for Valieva's comparatively long suspension was the ever changing and not at all credible strawberry cake from grandpa / mom's boyfriend / man who might not in fact even exist on the bus / train / wherever ingested by a skater who was otherwise denied sweets / food / water.Will CAS's Simona Halep decision affect the Valieva case?
Because they are delusional.They are protesting losing the gold.
Shall we hashtag this as #notwrong?Because they are delusional.
Where Russia really screwed up was having Valieva skate both SP and FS in the Team event.
I doubt that all the trimetazidine in the world would have helped Valieva overcome the psychological shock of having her doping test results published.Valieva skated well in the team event, but since the main event was the next day, (and she couldn't get the "quick recovery" effect of the banned 'heart medication') it's no wonder she so badly underperformed in the main eveeventI doubt that a
Actually she had a week before the SP to recover (the Men and Dance events were what followed the TE.). But as @Vagabond posted, no amount of drugs would have helped her psychologically recover from having her failed doping test revealed.Valieva skated well in the team event, but since the main event was the next day, (and she couldn't get the "quick recovery" effect of the banned 'heart medication') it's no wonder she so badly underperformed in the main event.
All sports is state sponsored! How do people really say in a country where all sports in state sponsored and part of the government budget that the doping is policy by government too. Essentially all behavior is state sponsored. All Eteris training methods are state sponsored. State sponsored dieting, state sponsored quads, state sponsored backloading!Where Russia really screwed up was in having a state-sponsored doping program at all.
I believed that a team having competed in 4 events can’t just be judged to have done 3! Because that 4th discipline affected the scores and it’s totally possible that a different team could have qualified to do the free skates. So the only thing that truly makes sense is to disqualify the entire team and all the points of everyone"Invalid composition" does not work here because a team was perfectly within the rules to only compete in three of the four disciplines. The ISU just set themselves up for disaster by saying some rules applied from their regular constitution of rules, only to have left the section directly below (team event purposes) pretty much empty and all other wording vague as always.
Well, what you believe is not what the ISU rules for the TE say, soooooooo... next.I believed that a team having competed in 4 events can’t just be judged to have done 3! Because that 4th discipline affected the scores and it’s totally possible that a different team could have qualified to do the free skates. So the only thing that truly makes sense is to disqualify the entire team and all the points of everyone
MOSCOW, March 7. /TASS/. Figure skater Kamila Valieva was excluded from the Russian national team. Alexander Kogan, General Director of the Russian Figure Skating Federation, reported this to TASS.
“Valiyeva is not currently part of the national team. Everything has been done in accordance with legislative documents,” Kogan said.
Hmmm, I don't know, maybe keep Russia banned?Tutberidze is now coaching a new generation of teenage Russian skaters preparing for the 2026 Milan-Cortina d’Ampezzo Olympics.
Niggli was asked what the International Olympic Committee, International Skating Union and anti-doping officials can do to prevent a possible repeat of the Valieva case in Italy.
Who isn’t allowing it? Russia seems to be complying with everything. It completely banned Valieva and dumped her very brutally. Is she homeless on the street?Also that “the current geopolitical situation will not allow for a WADA appointed investigation in Russia.” If Russia will not comply with all anti-doping requirements they need to stay banned.
Now Travis Tygart, the USA’s anti-doping chief, has called for action against the teenager’s entourage, saying the number of medications given to her was “sickening”. Olivier Niggli, the director general of the World Anti-Doping Agency (Wada), described it as “shocking” and said Valieva was “sacrificed” to protect those responsible.
The case is expected to reignite the debate over safeguards for children under 16 in elite sport, and even whether those so young should be allowed to compete. There are also suspicions that Russia’s state-sponsored doping programme that was exposed a decade ago has been replaced by medics seeking out a range of performance-enhancing drugs that have yet to be banned.
Valieva is now 17 and three weeks ago she appeared alongside Vladimir Putin, Russia’s president, when he launched the Future Games in Kazan, a new international sporting event involving athletes from Russia and several of its allies.
That appearance stung Thomas Bach, the IOC president, into a response. Bach, who in 2022 had described Tutberidze’s reaction to Valieva’s fumbling performance in the individual competition as “chilling”, said there was an “urgent need to look more into the entourage of the athletes … the ones that are finally responsible for the violation of the anti-doping rules”.
Bach added: “Valieva was misused for political purposes by having to stand next to President Putin at the so-called Future Games, showing disrespect for all the worldwide anti-doping rules and making a political statement. This is really very heavy to take.”
It doesn’t say 56 illegal steroidsShe took 56 different meds between ages 13 - 15. More than just one accidental sip of a grandparent’s medicine. Most of the article can be read through LinkedIn…
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I thought at first that I couldn't get in to see the article, but go by the twitter link and just close the box that says you have to pay.They could have picked someone other than Bach to represent the Sports Movement. How about all the gymnasts who made authorities pay attention to Larry Nassar? Or at least the first one or two.
So I can't get to the article but the headline sounds pretty bad. Was she taking 56 meds at once? That is a lot. The list from the test included a lot of things that are fairly harmless and common for athletes to take (some of which were repeated so the list looks longer than it is) mixed in with actual meds of a questionable nature. The list looked about as long as I expected given the athletes I know who are constantly looking for a (legal) edge and take a lot of supplements. It definitely didn't have 56 different substances on it!