martes, 10 de noviembre de 2015

EL NUEVO ESCANDALO DE DOPAJE. ACTIVIDAD EVALUADA

ACTIVIDAD:

Leer la transcripción de los dos artículos publicados en el periódico The New York Times, e ir a los enlaces relacionados, y hacer un análisis de su contenido utilizando sus conocimientos del idioma Inglés y de sus dos unidades curriculares como ejes transversales de la carrera Ciencias del Deporte. Luego desarrollar un ensayo en Español de máximo 4 páginas en Word, fuente times new roman tamaño 12, tamaño carta, con portada y conclusiones, para ser entregado vía correo electrónico a lacabrabicicletera@yahoo.com el jueves 19 de noviembre.


Years Later, Bittersweet Victory for Alysia Montaño
By CHRISTOPHER CLAREYNOV. 9, 2015 



Alysia Montaño was fifth in the women’s 800 at the 2012 Olympics. A World Anti-Doping Agency report has detailed doping in Russian track and field. Credit Josh Haner/The New York Times
Alysia Montaño, an American 800-meter runner, woke up early in Valencia, Calif. Knowing the World Anti-Doping Agency was releasing the findings of its extraordinary inquiry into doping and corruption in Russian track and field, she devoured the details of the report in bed as soon as she awoke.
And then she began to cry.
“My hands were shaking,” she said by telephone on Monday. “Anger, sadness, relief, all of it. I just got a rush of emotions. I can’t even pinpoint all of them. At first you think of all the moments you lost, and then you feel, ‘Oh my gosh, well, thank you.’ Then you are mad. I was sweating. I just broke out in a sweat, thinking, Is this real? Are they actually going to do something?”
The answer at this deeply demoralizing point for track and field appears to be yes, and it must be yes after all the institutional rot that Dick Pound’s committee confirmed and exposed in its 323-page report. Cover-ups of positive tests. Extortion. More than 1,400 destroyed samples. It is no wonder Pound’s independent committee has recommended Russia be suspended from track and field competition, including next year’s Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, until it proves it can play and test fair.

Mariya Savinova winning the women’s 800 at the London Games. Alysia Montaño is at far left. Credit Josh Haner/The New York Times
But for Pound to say he was surprised was quite an admission, considering that he was part of the Canadian delegation when the 100-meter champion Ben Johnson tested positive at the 1988 Olympics and later led the International Olympic Committee investigation into the Salt Lake City corruption scandal.
Montaño, still competing at age 29 after giving birth to a daughter last year, agrees with the push to ban Russia. She also believes she deserves some medals after finishing fourth in the 800 meters at the 2011 world championships, fifth in the 2012 London Olympics and fourth again at the 2013 world championships. In all those cases, she finished behind Russians who now face lifetime bans from the sport.
“Absolutely I deserve that bronze medal,” Montaño said of her Olympic race. “Even if I don’t get my podium moment, it’s still a symbol of my work and also this time in history.”
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Montaño said she was convinced her Russian rivals were doping in London, and the WADA report concluded as much. It called Russia’s inaction on expeditiously dealing with flags in the biological passports of Mariya Savinova, who won the gold, and Ekaterina Poistogova, who took the bronze, “unexplained and highly suspicious.”
“When you go back and watch the race,” Montaño said, “and you see someone literally watching the race behind you, kind of jogging, and you are putting out max effort, and they kind of just walk past you, put their hands in the air and are like ‘Yay!’ and you are on the ground, huffing and puffing and about to throw up, you are like, ‘Are you kidding me?’ But you can’t speak up until you have evidence. You just come off as a sour apple.”



But missing the podium in London cost her more than sleep. It cost her money. “Maybe half a million dollars, if you look at rollovers and bonuses, and that’s without outside sponsorship maybe coming in,” she said. “That’s not why you’re doing it, but you still deserve it.”
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There have been too many dark times in her sport’s history, too many high-profile busts that should have solved the major doping problem for good but turned into false dawns: Johnson in 1988, or the American sprinter Marion Jones and the Bay Area Laboratory Co-operative in the 2000s.
You can say this for track and field: It takes down its biggest stars. The trouble is that outside prodding and enterprise are too often required. “Obviously, it’s sad that it took a big investigative report for them to do something,” Montaño said, praising — as Pound had — a groundbreaking German television documentary by ARD that brought the Russian doping to light last year.
But what makes this round of scandal more egregious is the degree of cynicism and venality. If it is proved that Lamine Diack, who served for 16 years as president of track and field’s governing body, the International Association of Athletics Federations, did indeed demand bribes totaling more than one million euros in order to suppress positive doping tests, then the corruption went straight from the top to the track. And what would make it all the more unforgivable is that Diack spent much of his mandate defending his federation’s record on antidoping, most recently when he commandeered the microphone to make a rambling, closing remark on the subject at his farewell news conference in Beijing in August.
The French authorities, who have placed Diack under criminal investigation on suspicion of corruption and money laundering, will have the final word on his involvement. But Montaño does not sound nearly as surprised as one would expect her to be.
“I try not to think about the most negative thing, but when I heard it, I thought that sounds about right,” she said. “The I.A.A.F. is a corrupt organization. So this says everything anyone has ever assumed, if you want to use the word assumed. But it’s the truth. You can’t assume the truth.”
The question now — with the latest hurricane over and the beach covered with broken trust and debris — is how the I.A.A.F. and Russia will clean up. It seems imperative that WADA’s leadership heed the Pound committee recommendation and declare Russia noncompliant with the WADA code at its board meeting next week. It seems imperative that the I.A.A.F. act with equal alacrity to ban Russia from track and field competitions.
Sebastian Coe, who succeeded Diack as I.A.A.F. president in August, already is facing calls to step down. Coe was vice president of the I.A.A.F. for eight years before securing the top spot, and he spent many an hour in Diack’s company without — so Coe insists — the slightest inkling of Diack’s suspected criminal behavior.
“I will do whatever it will take to fix this,” Coe told Britain’s Channel 4 on Monday. “I have the full support of the sport, and I will do this.”
It is tempting, very tempting, to conclude once and for all that international sports federations have no business testing and sanctioning their own athletes, their own meal tickets. Even in a best case, the appearance of conflict still exists.
Giving a more neutral organization like WADA full responsibility for testing international-level athletes is one solution. The shift could be financed by pooling existing antidoping resources and by increasing the money supplied by the I.O.C. and national governments. But that tack, too, carries a risk. Who then monitors WADA?
“I think we need to look at an outside doping agency, people that aren’t related to the sport,” Montaño said. “We need someone who is a biochemist and all they are into is the lab report.”
Whatever the changes, they will come too late for Montaño to get her rightful Olympic moment or reward. She still has lofty goals, however.
“I’d really like to race,” she said, “in the women’s human 800-meter clean athletes final.”
A version of this article appears in print on November 10, 2015, on page B10 of the New York edition with the headline: Years Later, Bittersweet


Drugs Pervade Sport in Russia, World Anti-Doping Agency Report Finds



Dick Pound arrived to speak at a news conference in Geneva on Monday. Credit Salvatore Di Nolfi/Keystone, via Associated Press
GENEVA — Members of Russia’s secret service intimidated workers at a drug-testing lab to cover up top athletes’ positive results. They impersonated lab engineers during the Winter Olympics in Sochi last year. A lab once destroyed more than 1,400 samples.
Athletes adopted false identities to avoid unexpected testing. Some paid to make doping violations disappear. Others bribed the antidoping authorities to ensure favorable results, and top sports officials routinely submitted bogus urine samples for athletes who were doping.
Those allegations were among hundreds contained in a report released Monday by the World Anti-Doping Agency. Across 323 pages, it implicates athletes, coaches, trainers, doctors and various Russian institutions, laying out what is very likely the most extensive state-sponsored doping program since the notorious East German regime of the 1970s.
In addition to providing a granular look at systematic doping, the group that drafted the report made extraordinary recommendations, including a proposal that Russia be suspended from competition by track and field’s governing body and barred from track and field events at next summer’s Olympics in Rio de Janeiro.

 “It’s worse than we thought,” Dick Pound, founding president of the World Anti-Doping Association and an author of the report, said at a news conference in a Geneva hotel. “This is an old attitude from the Cold War days.”
Russian officials responded with defiance, disputing the investigation’s findings. “Whatever we do, everything is bad,” Vitaly Mutko, Russia’s sports minister, told the news agency Interfax. “If this whole system needs to shut down, we will shut it down gladly. We will stop paying fees, stop funding the Russian antidoping agency, the Moscow antidoping laboratory. We will only save money.”
Dr. Grigory Rodchenkov, the director of the Moscow lab whom Monday’s report accused of having solicited and accepted bribes, dismissed the suggestions. “This is an independent commission which only issues recommendations,” he said. “There are three fools sitting there who don’t understand the laboratory.”
Mr. Pound said he had presented the group’s findings to Mr. Mutko before they were released publicly. “He’s frustrated to some degree,” he said. “He certainly knew what was going on. They all knew.”
The report also recommended that the World Anti-Doping Agency impose lifetime bans on five Russian coaches and five athletes, including the gold and bronze medalists in the women’s 800 meters at the 2012 London Olympics.
“The Olympic Games in London were, in a sense, sabotaged by the admission of athletes who should have not been competing,” the report read.
Bans from competition are not all that could come of the inquiry. Mr. Pound said the agency had negotiated a cooperation agreement with Interpol and had handed over extensive documents and evidence. Interpol confirmed that cooperation with its own announcement on Monday, noting that related inquiries stretched from Singapore to France.

Russia Is the Violations Leader 

 

In June 2015, the World Anti-Doping Agency released its first set of statistics on doping violations. The violations, taken from 2013 data, included 115 countries and 89 sports. Russia had the highest number of violations -- 225 across 30 sports -- with 42 of them coming from track and field events.
Last week, the French authorities announced that they had opened a criminal investigation into the former president of track and field’s world governing body, Lamine Diack of Senegal, over allegations that he accepted bribes to allow at least six Russian athletes to participate in competitions, including the 2012 Olympics.
The former director of the medical and antidoping division of that governing body, the International Association of Athletics Federations, is also under investigation, the French authorities said, along with Mr. Diack’s legal adviser.
Russian athletes, in soaring numbers, have been caught doping in recent years. Russia had far more drug violations than any other country in 2013 — 225, or 12 percent of all violations globally, according to data from the World Anti-Doping Agency. About a fifth of Russia’s infractions involved track and field athletes, the focus of Monday’s report.
“This level of corruption attacks sport at its core,” Richard H. McLaren, a Canadian lawyer and an author of the report, said in an interview Sunday. In contrast to corporate governance scandals like those currently affecting world soccer, he said, drug use by athletes has distorted the essence of professional games. “Bribes and payoffs don’t change actual sporting events,” Mr. McLaren said. “But doping takes away fair competition.”
The report released Monday was the result of a 10-month investigation by an independent commission of WADA. Its inquiry stemmed from a December 2014 documentary by the German public broadcaster ARD, which drew on accounts from Russian athletes, coaches and antidoping officials, who said that the Russian government had helped procure drugs for athletes and cover up positive test results.
Further allegations emerged in August, when ARD and The Sunday Times of London released another report more broadly covering the leaked results of thousands of international athletes’ blood tests dating to 2001, showing decorated athletes in good standing with suspicious drug tests. Those allegations — which drew significant suspicion to Kenya — are also being investigated by the independent commission, but the results were not included in Monday’s report, as the inquiry is not complete, the agency said.
The three-person commission, led by Mr. Pound, also included Mr. McLaren, who teaches law at the University of Western Ontario, and Günter Younger, the head of cybercrime for the police in the German state of Bavaria.

Commission Accuses Russia of Doping

Richard W. Pound, a co-author of a report from the World Anti-Doping Agency accusing Russia of running a doping program, spoke on Monday in Geneva on the findings.
WADA’s foundation and executive board will decide whether to act on the commission’s recommendations; they are scheduled to meet next week in Colorado Springs, an event that motivated the timing of the release of the commission’s report, Mr. Pound said.
In a statement on Monday, the International Olympic Committee called the report “deeply shocking” and said it trusted the judgment of the I.A.A.F., which would decide whether to bar Russia from competition.
Mr. Pound did not offer any time frame for the recommended suspension. If Russia did not fight the prescriptions — to enact rigorous and specific drug-testing controls — he said he thought it could be possible for the country’s track and field athletes to compete in the Summer Olympics.
 “If they do the surgery and do the therapy, I hope they can get there,” he said. “That is your nuclear weapon. Either get this done or you are not going to Rio.”
The commission also recommended that the Russian antidoping authority be declared non-code-compliant indefinitely; that the director of the Moscow laboratory be removed from his job; and that the lab, which was provisionally banned in 2013, lose its accreditation.
In the case of financial prizes awarded to athletes with drug test results now thought to be tainted, “the money’s gone,” Mr. Pound said, “and whoever ought to have won didn’t.”
The Russian Ministry of Sport did not immediately respond to a request for comment. But the initial reaction in Russia fell in line with the tradition since Soviet times, with many attributing the revelations to a Western plot to undermine the country’s accomplishments.

“It is all connected with the fact that Russian athletes demonstrate such good results, some countries are not satisfied with it,” said Igor Ananskikh, a member of the youth policy and sports committee of the Russian Parliament.
Nikolai Valuev, a former Russian heavyweight boxing champion now serving as a deputy in the Parliament, said on the state-run Rossiya 24 television channel: “In recent times, I hear only about investigations of Russian athletes. This has already become a system, too.
“First of all,” he said, “we must conduct a broad investigation to find out whether the results of the investigation are true.”
Days before Monday’s report was published, however, Russia’s athletics federation suspended five athletes, including a noted distance runner, Maria Konovalova.
“The Russians themselves have said there are vestiges of the old Soviet system, old-guard coaches who haven’t changed and can’t change,” Mr. McLaren said. “The minister of sport says their way of operating is over. But read our report.”
Russia has had a particularly prominent place in the international sports spotlight in recent years, hosting not only the Winter Games in Sochi in 2014 but also the track and field world championships in Moscow the year before.
The country is scheduled to host the next World Cup, in 2018, although the Swiss authorities are investigating allegations that Russia might have secured the tournament through under-the-table agreements. The Moscow laboratory implicated in Monday’s report is set to oversee testing for FIFA during the World Cup. The lab did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Mr. Pound declined to say whether he thought Russia should be stripped of its status as host of that tournament. “I think FIFA’s got to sort out its own difficulties — without our help,” he said.
Mr. Mutko, Russia’s sports minister, sits on FIFA’s executive committee.
“The credibility of sport has taken some serious body blows in the last month,” Mr. Pound said, referring to the FIFA corruption case and to Monday’s report, which suggested that similar doping violations existed beyond track and field. “Public opinion is going to move toward all sports being corrupt.”
Neil MacFarquhar, Ivan Nechepurenko and Alexandra Odynova contributed reporting from Moscow.
A version of this article appears in print on November 10, 2015, on page A1 of the New York edition with the headline: Drugs Pervade Russian Sport, Report Alleges



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