Eurosport - Fri, 01 Aug 09:49:00 2008
The IAAF has banned seven leading Russian female athletes after charging them with manipulating drug samples.
"They are definitely suspended and will miss the Beijing Olympics," Russian Athletics Federation president Valentin Balakhnichyov told Reuters.
The seven are twice world 1500 metres champion Tatyana Tomashova (pictured), world indoor 1500 metres champion Yelena Soboleva, distance runners Yuliya Fomenko and Svetlana Cherkasova, European discus champion Darya Pishchalnikova, former hammer world record holder Gulfia Khanafeyeva and former world 5000 metres champion Olga Yegorova.
"The athletes have been charged under IAAF Rules 32.2 (b) and 32.2 (e) for a fraudulent substitution of urine which is both a prohibited method and also a form of tampering with the doping control process," the IAAF stated.
Balakhnichyov added: "We were notified by the IAAF their drug samples taken in out-of-competition tests in May 2007 and then at last year's world championships in Osaka do not match.
"Unfortunately we don't have much choice but to suspend them."
All bar Cherkasova had already qualified for the Olympics, which begin on August 8, and were leading contenders for medals.
Soboleva, 25, has been on fire this season, posting the world's best times in the 1500 and 800.
She smashed her own indoor 1500 world record to win gold at the world indoor championships in Valencia in March, with Fomenko finishing second.
Tomashova, 33, has dominated the 1500 in recent years, winning back-to-back world titles in Paris in 2003 and Helsinki two years later. She also finished second at the 2004 Athens Olympics.
Yegorova, 36, tested positive for the banned blood-boosting substance EPO prior to the 2001 world championships in Edmonton but was allowed to compete after her suspension was lifted because of an incomplete testing procedure.
She went on to win the 5000 there and also finished second behind Tomashova in the 1500 at the 2005 world championships in Helsinki.
After winning the European discus title in Gothenburg in 2006, 23-year-old Pishchalnikova took silver with a personal best of 65.78 metres at last year's world championships behind Germany's Franka Dietzsch.
Khanafeyeva, 26, briefly held the hammer world record with a throw of 77.26 metres in 2006. She was suspected of failing a drugs test at the 2007 World Military Games in Hyderabad, India before being cleared by the organisers.
Balakhnichyov said the suspensions had dealt a major blow to the Russian team.
"It's a huge, devastating blow just a week before the Olympics. I don't know how we will recover from it," he said.
Comment 1 - 4 of 4
So the fact that it took more than a year to detect the "fraud" does not seem strange to anyone...
Well if they arent going to Beijing...they can don thier kit and jog around my garden if they want....apart from the discus lass ofc.
Said this when the puritans wre pointing their fingers at cycling still need to beat us==US lawyers and chemists though read that christines avoidance according to steve cram is different but he failed to go into detail can anyone shed light on her special circumstances as iwould like to know
This is a perfect example of why the 'biological passport' adopted by the UCI [cycling] should be adopted in athletics as well. Though testing, in and out of competition, is a useful tool, the biological passport would allow individual country's athletics associations to monitor more closely the progress [legal or illegal] of their own athletes, meaning that cheating can be discovered before competitions, or before selection races for major tournaments.
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