S. Korea to ask IOC to look into Russian figure skater's doping admission

More Sports / 유지호 / 2023-07-11 13:50:57
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S Korea-figure skating controversy
▲ In this file photo from Feb. 20, 2014, Kim Yu-na of South Korea reacts after completing her free skate in the women's single figure skating competition during the Sochi Winter Olympics at Iceberg Skating Palace in Sochi, Russia. (Yonhap)

▲ In this file photo from Feb. 20, 2014, Adelina Sotnikova of Russia celebrates after completing her free skate in the women's single figure skating competition during the Sochi Winter Olympics at Iceberg Skating Palace in Sochi, Russia. (Yonhap)

S Korea-figure skating controversy

S. Korea to ask IOC to look into Russian figure skater's doping admission

SEOUL, July 11 (Yonhap) -- The top South Korean sports body said Tuesday it will ask the International Olympic Committee (IOC) to investigate a recent doping admission by a Russian figure skater who beat South Korean star Kim Yu-na for the controversial gold at the 2014 Winter Games.

The move by the Korean Sport & Olympic Committee (KSOC) comes in light of a recent acknowledgement by Adelina Sotnikova, the 2014 Olympic women's singles figure skating champion, that she had a positive doping test in 2014, though she was cleared by her second, "B," sample.

It is considered rare in sports doping for an athlete to test positive in an A sample but return a different result in a B sample.

"The Korea Anti-Doping Agency is gathering relevant data and information," a KSOC official said. "After we collect the information we need, we will ask the IOC to look into Sotnikova's case. She said herself that she tested positive in her A sample but negative in her B sample. This is an extremely rare instance that needs reinvestigation. Since drug testing technology has improved over the years, we think they should be able to find something that they couldn't in the past."

At the 2014 Olympics, Sotnikova scored 224.59 points overall to beat out Kim, then the defending champion and gold medal favorite, by more than five points. Sotnikova's performance and resulting gold medal sparked a judging controversy.

In the aftermath, Sotnikova also faced allegations that her samples had been tampered with. The IOC later cleared her of wrongdoing in the absence of sufficient evidence.

Speaking on a Russian YouTube channel last week, Sotnikova said she had tested positive in the same year of her Olympic triumph but was cleared by her B sample.

The video has since been removed.

"Per rules by the World Anti-Doping Agency, blood and urine samples from athletes must be stored for 10 years," the KSOC official said. "If the IOC accepts our request, then we should be able to clear all suspicions."

In past instances, athletes in other sports have been stripped of Olympic medals when their samples collected during competition turned up positive in a reanalysis.

(END)

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