Kicking dope-tainted Russia out of sport not the answer — Coe
MARSEILLE, France (AFP) — Track legend Sebastian Coe, campaigning for the presidency of world athletics, said yesterday that Russia should not be kicked out of sport because of its doping scandal.
Coe told AFP in an interview that Russia has been through “a difficult time”, but it must be helped to set up a clean sports machine.
The International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) ethics committee is investigating multiple cases of alleged doping and attempts to cover up drug failures in Russia.
Coe said the IAAF leadership “is about making sure that those federations who do have these challenges are not isolated or banned as some people have suggested.
“People are saying ‘we must kick these federations out of sport’. No, actually good presidencies make sure that we help them create an environment and systems that do have integrity and do have trust, and that is our responsibility as well,” said Coe, currently an IAAF vice-president.
Coe praised comments by Russia’s sports minister “talking in terms of wanting integrity and trust in sport. They have been through a difficult time but those are the right responses.”
Having at first denied claims of widespread doping made in a German television documentary, Russian athletics federation Valentin Balakhnichev resigned this month saying he had “failed” to control rising doping problems.
Coe said in December that the IAAF had the power to ban Russia and that the allegations were “damaging”. But he has since toned down his line.
“I know that the ministry of sport in Russia and the Russian federation are very keen to establish good working relationships, to establish new systems and new people, and those are the right responses,” he declared in the interview.
“The IAAF must do everything it can to help those federations that want to re-engineer and want to change,” he added.
A number of top athletes in powerhouses Kenya and Jamaica have also failed tests in recent months. But Coe said no sport should lecture athletics about doping.
“The IAAF does more testing than any other sport out there. We are very open and very transparent about how we test,” said the former Olympic champion who masterminded the 2012 London Games.
More than 1,000 top athletes around the world are subject to tests each year which cost more than $3 million (2.6 million euros) a year.
“The IAAF does more testing than any other sport out there,” he said.
World and Olympic sprint champion Usain Bolt is also the world’s most tested athlete, and Coe said athletics had to prepare for the Jamaican’s retirement in 2017.
Coe said the IAAF had to give “marketing support” to other stars such as Kenya’s 800 metres Olympic champion David Rudisha, New Zealand shot putter Valerie Adams, Ukrainian high jumper Bogdan Bondarenko and Croatia’s woman high jumper Blanka Vlasic, a former world athlete of the year.