2nd Russian athlete tests positive for doping at Olympics
Bobsledder Nadezhda Sergeeva placed 12th in 2-man event
By James Ellingworth, The Associated Press
A second Russian athlete has failed a doping test at the Winter Games in Pyeongchang, a day before the International Olympic Committee's executive board is to decide whether to reinstate the country for Sunday's closing ceremony.
Russian Bobsled Federation president Alexander Zubkov told The Associated Press on Friday that a drug-test sample that pilot Nadezhda Sergeeva gave Sunday was positive.
The Russian delegation at the Olympics said in a statement that the substance found was trimetazdine, a medication used for angina sufferers that is listed by the World Anti-Doping Agency as a banned substance affecting metabolism.
CBC News has confirmed this information.
"She confirms she took no such medication and the team confirms she was not issued any medication," said Zubkov, a former bobsledder who himself was stripped of two Olympic gold medals for the Russian doping scheme at the 2014 Sochi Games. "Federation representatives at the Olympics" are starting to prepare a defence, he said.
He also said a sample she had given five days earlier was negative.
"I can tell you that on the 13th it was clean, but on the 18th it gave a positive result for the heart medication."
Sergeeva's crew finished 12th in the women's bobsled competition on Wednesday, after she had given the sample that later came back positive.
The Russian team was barred from the Olympics in December for doping at the Sochi Games, but the IOC invited 168 athletes from the country to compete under the Olympic flag.
Earlier this month, Sergeeva told the AP that competitors from other countries had warmed to her after she passed IOC vetting for Pyeongchang that included an examination of her drug-testing history.
"I don't know why, but they've started talking to us more than ever before. I feel it. Maybe it's a sign to them that we're clean," Sergeeva said. "There's a lot of people coming up and saying, `We're happy you're here."'
'I don't do doping'
At the time, she was training in a T-shirt with the words "I Don't Do Doping."
It is the fourth doping case of the Games. Russian curler Alexander Krushelnitsky was stripped of his bronze medal Thursday after testing positive for the banned substance meldonium. Slovenian hockey player Ziga Jeglic and Japanese speed skater Kei Saito also left the Games after testing positive.
Trimetazidine, the substance found in Sergeeva's sample, has been detected in previous doping cases. Chinese swimmer Sun Yang, an Olympic gold medallist, was banned for three months in 2014 by his country's sports authorities after testing positive.
Sun said he had been prescribed the drug for a medical condition and hadn't known it was banned. The perceived leniency of that three-month ban led to Sun receiving criticism from swimmers from other countries at the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, where he won another gold medal.
Russia's bobsled program has been in the spotlight for drug use for several years.
Zubkov and four other bobsledders were disqualified from the 2014 Sochi Games for doping, though four other bobsledders have been reinstated. Another gold medallist, Dmitry Trunenkov, was banned last year for failing a doping test.