Disaster An Olympic-sized fight erupts among anti-doping officials, and it’s just getting started


By EDDIE PELLS
Updated 12:24 PM CDT, July 25, 2024

PARIS (AP) — The stream of threats, recriminations and anti-doping innuendo flowed freely again Thursday when tensions over a U.S. law designed to combat drugs in sports escalated on the eve of the Paris Olympics.

It’s a fight that’s been simmering for a decade, sparked by Russia’s brazen doping scandal at the Sochi Olympics. The reaction from the World Anti-Doping Agency and IOC was criticized as too weak by many, including the United States. So much so, that the U.S. passed a law in 2020 giving federal authorities power to investigate sports doping and cover-ups.

After details emerged about 23 Chinese swimmers who tested positive for a banned substance - Chinese authorities blamed it on contamination from a hotel kitchen - but none were suspended and some went on to win medals at the Tokyo Olympics, the U.S. launched an investigation.

The latest round of backlash played out in a trio of news conferences in Paris, the highlight of which came when leaders at WADA suggested they might sanction one of their biggest critics, the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency, over the law.

“As a global regulator, one of our duties is to make sure our stakeholders are following our regulations and rules, and that the national legislation is in accordance with the world anti-doping code,” WADA president Witold Banka explained.

While some tried to calm things down, others could see a worst-case scenario: that the U.S. not be allowed to host big-time events such as the Olympics in the future.

Banka’s statement came a day after the International Olympic Committee awarded the 2034 Winter Games to Salt Lake City, but cast a pall over that celebration by extracting a promise that organizers pressure U.S. lawmakers to scuttle the law, along with a related investigation into the Chinese doping case.

A law that passed unanimously​

Chances of that are slim — the American Congress passed that bill in 2020 without a dissenting vote — so another strategy would be to go after USADA.


If WADA determines the law, called the Rodchenkov Act, doesn’t adhere to the rules, it could start the process of finding USADA in noncompliance.

That, in turn, could trigger sanctions, which can jeopardize America’s ability to host international events. It’s the same treatment WADA handed to Russia’s anti-doping agency during that country’s long-running drug scandal.

Congress recently held a hearing about the Chinese doping scandal and there have been suggestions that the U.S. government might withhold its annual funding from WADA.

The chair and ranking member of the House Energy and Commerce Committee — Reps. Cathy McMorris Rodgers (R-Wash.) and Frank Pallone, Jr. (D-N.J.) — released a statement.

“It speaks volumes that the IOC would demand a one-sided contract condition to protect WADA rather than work together to ensure it is fulfilling its mission to protect clean sport,” they said.

Threatening USADA​

The mere threat of putting USADA on a noncompliant list marks the latest broadside in a mushrooming exchange of rhetoric.

USADA’s CEO, Travis Tygart struck back.

“You know it’s a broken system when WADA ... threatens a compliance case against USADA for a U.S. law enacted by Congress that has cleaned up sport consistent with the WADA rules and has been in existence for several years,” he said in a statement to The Associated Press.

At his own news conference in Paris, USOPC chair Gene Sykes, who was just made a member of the IOC, said he hopes this pattern of “throwing rocks at each other” would calm down soon.

“I think the tempers between WADA and USADA as reflected in the statements that go back and forth between the two of them are unfortunately just too emotional,” Sykes said.

Some athletes, including Caeleb Dressel, don’t trust the system​

World Aquatics, which runs swimming, held its own news conference, where swimmers and executives were asked about the Chinese case.

American swimmer Caeleb Dressel was asked if he had confidence in the anti-doping system.

“No. Not really.” Dressel said. “I don’t really think they’ve given us enough evidence to support them in how this case was handled.”

A few seats away was World Aquatics executive director Brent Nowicki who, as the AP reported earlier this month, recently received a subpoena from U.S. investigators as part of their probe into the China case.

“We have to regain his trust and those athletes’ trust who share that same opinion,” Nowicki said. “I’d like you to ask that same question of Caeleb in L.A. (at the 2028 Olympics). My hope, my goal, is that his mind changes.”

Some IOC leaders are worried about traveling to the U.S.​

The Nowicki subpoena is part of the first known use of the Rodchenkov Act for an international incident.

It illustrates the wide net U.S. investigators might cast to fight doping — wide enough that it seems some folks are avoiding the United States, altogether. For instance, WADA moved a conference it had planned for this fall from New York to Montreal.

“I don’t think I would share my private travel schedule in a press conference,” WADA director general Olivier Niggli said, drawing laughs, when asked if he had plans to visit the U.S.

The law was passed to allow American authorities to prosecute doping conspiracies in any sports event involving U.S. athletes — which includes the Olympics and pretty much every major competition around the world.

WADA has long lobbied against this law, specifically its “extraterritorial” clause, which it says gives U.S. authorities a separate and inappropriate role in enforcing anti-doping rules against foreigners.

“It’s highly incorrect that one country tries to impose jurisdiction on anti-doping decisions on the rest of the world,” Banka said.

Salt Lake City caught in the middle​

None of this was on the radar of leaders in Salt Lake City, who came to Paris expecting a celebration, and maybe even a pat on the back for offering to host the Winter Games — an event cities aren’t lining up to underwrite anymore.

SLC organizing president Fraser Bullock said despite the language in the contract “in my mind, there’s zero doubt” that Utah will host the Games, as promised.

“For us, we feel bad that we did get pulled into it,” Bullock said. “But we understand that’s an issue that has to be addressed. It’s just very unfortunate timing.”

___ AP National Writer Paul Newberry contributed.
 
tldr

China Swimmers use drugs in the 2020/2021 Olympics.
Didn't come out that this happened until this year
NYT Broke the story
China is using WADA and the IOC to threaten to revoke SLC's privilege to host the 2032 Winter Olympics if the US doesn't back down on investigating the case.
 
tldr

China Swimmers use drugs in the 2020/2021 Olympics.
Didn't come out that this happened until this year
NYT Broke the story
China is using WADA and the IOC to threaten to revoke SLC's privilege to host the 2032 Winter Olympics if the US doesn't back down on investigating the case.
They've been caught using drugs since like 2008 at least.
Nobody cares anymore.
Apparently this year the Chinese swimmers were tested 26 times each. And they passed.

So China has kicked up a fuss that some of the US competitors weren't tested at all.

TBH I think everyones doping. It's gonna be US Baseball all over again. 🤣
 
Of course the Chinese are cheating it's the same reason I don't take any sports seriously that doesn't have any actual objective scoring system and instead based on judges I used to think judges could be impartial but no I guarantee you every single Olympic judge takes a large amount of money.
It's like this small amount of points they gave to the Japanese to win skateboarding sorry the Justin Bieber look alike lost to the American
 
Of course the Chinese are cheating it's the same reason I don't take any sports seriously that doesn't have any actual objective scoring system and instead based on judges I used to think judges could be impartial but no I guarantee you every single Olympic judge takes a large amount of money.
It's like this small amount of points they gave to the Japanese to win skateboarding sorry the Justin Bieber look alike lost to the American
O fuck off. Maybe the Americans are just worse? If you watch the skateboarding it’s obvious how much better the Japanese trick was.
 
tldr

China Swimmers use drugs in the 2020/2021 Olympics.
Didn't come out that this happened until this year
NYT Broke the story
China is using WADA and the IOC to threaten to revoke SLC's privilege to host the 2032 Winter Olympics if the US doesn't back down on investigating the case.
Call their bluff, nobody wants to babysi---errrr "host" the Olympics anymore.
 
Just get on with it and have a separate sports competition where everyone's openly roided up hulks pushing the human bodies to their limits. Hell even dope them up on PCP before an event and see what happens, I wanna see a human break the sound barrier
The Dark Olympics sounds amazing.
 
Apparently this year the Chinese swimmers were tested 26 times each. And they passed.
The issue isn't them passing at the Olympics or not, the issue is what was going on in training.

The CCP feeding their athletes meat tainted with clenbuterol and trimetazidine and then telling WADA, "it was just tainted meat, oops!" and getting away with it repeatedly is a major issue.
 
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The lengths some people go to dope is crazy. I heard stories of people transplanting piss in people's kidneys to pass piss tests. Weightlifting for sure is just all dopers. Theres no other ways to put up some of these numbers unless people are doping. China has been caught doping in almost every single game they are in, and if they havent been caught, they havent been caught yet. Chinese people are cheaters, they will cheat everywhere they can then act indignant if it gets brought up.
 
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The issue isn't them passing at the Olympics or not, the issue is what was going on in training.

The CCP feeding their athletes meat tainted with clenbuterol and trimetazidine and then telling WADA, "it was just tainted meat, oops!" and getting away with it repeatedly is a major issue.
I just think the only issue now isn't doping, it's about how various nations get around the doping tests. Or if you are a poor nation, you can't even afford to dope your guys undetectably.

Remember Lance Armstrong, remember Maria Sharapova. Top of their fields, champions. But likely the doping tests just caught up to their methods.
 
Remember Lance Armstrong, remember Maria Sharapova. Top of their fields, champions. But likely the doping tests just caught up to their methods.
Armstrong is an interesting case. It's pretty clear he was corrupted by a single coach - Armstrong's cancer wasn't a common one and most of the other riders in that training program ended up with rare cancers, as well. Ones that can be caused by some of the doping methods that were bleeding edge at the time.

His doping scheme wasn't even about being faster, it was about tiny, strategic improvements in recovery from exertion across the entire team. It was a massive departure from previous cheating. He really was the best all-rounder during his prime, and would have been, the cheating was mostly about no one on the team having an off day and always being at their best. He was still world champion before being corrupted by that coach, and UCI never took away any of those honors. What they did wouldn't have done much without having the insanely great teams they put together. It's kind of the tragedy of it, he still, most likely, would have had 5 of those TdF wins, just not all 7.

Even the next big cheating scandal was about more gross improvements.

I think the Armstrong approach is what China is trying with their swim team. The occasional "oops, the whole team failed but they are clean a few days later" really points to that. Tygart understands that well.
 
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Reactions: Sangria Nigger
Fair enough.

If I were the IOC: "All Chinese participants are banned from the Games until further notice due to suspicion of doping."

They don't want to stop cheating, they won't be allowed to play. Have them have the RFK Jr. Games for all I care.
 
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