Doping echoes of East Germany
By Alan Abrahamson | 3/24/14 |Doping in elite international sport is “rampant,” the former executive who last year exposed failings in the Jamaican testing program said this week at a conference in London, just as it emerged that the entire Azerbaijan weightlifting team’s results from the 2013 European championships were wiped out — five lifters, 14 medals — by positive tests.
Moreover, those tests were for oral turinabol, the very same steroid at the heart of the 1970s East German doping system.
Four more Azeri weightlifters were also sanctioned in 2013 after testing positive for the exact same steroid. Two were teenagers — one 17, the other 16 — when they tested positive. The seeming star of the team is now just 19; he was a bronze medalist at the London 2012 Summer Games.
Among those suspended: Azeri weightlifter Valentin Hristov, a London 2012 bronze medalist, shown here at the 2013 world championships // photo Getty Images
Speaking Wednesday at the Tackling Doping in Sport conference, Renee Anne Shirley, the former director of the Jamaica Anti-Doping Commission, said, “Every time someone says, ‘We don’t have a problem in X sport or Y country, I say, ‘Oh, really?’ “
Meanwhile, the International Weightlifting Federation, based in Budapest, released an opaque statementacknowledging that the Azeri competitors and the national federation had “received punishment.” Separately, the Azeri head weightlifting coach, Zlatan Vanev, said, “I [am], frankly, shocked.”
For all the very real progress the World Anti-Doping Agency, the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency and others have made over the past dozen or so years, the Lance Armstrong affair, Operation Puerto, BALCO and more have made it abundantly clear that doping remains a powerful current with which sports officials, police and prosecutors must contend.
The shock is not that the current exerts its pull.
It always will do so. Human nature is what it is.
The shock is threefold:
One, the Azeri weightlifting program — an asset of a state ministry — apparently sought to enhance performance in 2013 in much the same fashion the East Germans did in the 1970s. Has nothing changed in some 40 years?
Two, the Azeris are hardly alone. Other weightlifters were also sanctioned in 2013 for using oral turinabol, including more than half a dozen from Kazakhstan.
Three, instead of making an example of such programs and those athletes, the International Weightlifting Federation opted to low-key the matter. Why?
The 2015 weightlifting world championships are due to come to Houston, in November. The sport will get far more attention in the U.S., and indeed the western, press then than it typically does. The months between now and then offer a window for the International Olympic Committee to take a long, hard look at weightlifting and to assess, meaningfully, whether weightlifting deserves its place in the Summer Games.
Wrestling got such a review in 2013. Now it’s weightlifting’s turn.
Should a sport with such a demonstrably poor record in the anti-doping campaign keep getting a free pass when it comes to staying on the Olympic program? Shouldn’t weightlifting have to meet real metrics, and prove to the IOC that — as a prerequisite for staying on for 2024 and beyond — it is serious about cleaning up?
Some background and context:
For all the widespread public focus on sports such as cycling and track and field, weightlifting is where the most concentrated work in the anti-doping campaign needs to be done.
Numbers do not lie.
According to the WADA’s 2012 report, the most recent year for which figures are available, weightlifting showed 159 “adverse analytical findings” — that is, positive tests — from 3,893 in-competition urine tests worldwide, for a return rate of 4.1 percent.
For comparison:
Across all sports, there were 1,546 positive in-competition tests, out of 102,102, a return rate of 1.5 percent.
Weightlifting also had —by far —the most out-of-competition positives, 91, out of 4,299 tests, a rate of 2.1 percent.
The sport with the next-most, track and field, had only 38, out of 10,952 samples, a rate of 0.3 percent. Cycling? 24 positives from 6,797 tests, 0.35 percent. Swimming, just as another example? 11 positives from 6,444 tests, 0.1 percent.
Across the board, there were 280 positives in 71,349 out-of-competition samples, 0.4 percent.
That report also details what happens when you inject real money into the equation.
As part of the lab process, officials can use a far more refined analysis —it’s called the carbon-isotope test —to look for evidence of doping. Each use costs about $400.
Around the world in 2012, officials used the carbon-isotope test 318 times to search for evidence of doping in weightlifting. Figuring $400 per test, that’s just over $127,000.
For $127,000, here’s what you got:
—108 in-competition samples, 17 positive tests, 15.7 percent.
—210 out-of-competition tests, 32 positive tests, 15.2 percent.
Combined, that’s 318 tests, 49 positive tests, a return rate of 15.4 percent.
To be super-obvious, 15.4 percent blows away the “normal” rates of 4.1 or 2.1 percent.
Statistically, no other Olympic sport is nowhere close to weightlifting’s 15.4 percent return rate. Cycling, thought by many amid the revelations of the Armstrong case to be simply filthy? 4.97 percent, on 543 carbon-isotope tests. Track and field, 5.75 percent.
If you know where and how to dig through the IWF’s website, you find even more disturbing figures.
Deep within that site are the IWF’s lists of “sanctioned athletes.”
Up now is the list for 2013. It shows the IWF sanctioned — to be clear, these are cases in which a positive test produced action — 76 athletes around the world, 53 from in-competition tests, 23 out-of-competition, the vast majority, whether in- or out-of-competition, for steroids.
A full 43 of those 76, or 56.5 percent, were for stanozolol. That is like taking a ride on the way-back machine to 1988. Because that is the same steroid that got Canadian sprinter Ben Johnson busted at the Seoul Games.
Twelve of the 76? From Kazakhstan. Seven of those 12 — busted for oral turinabol as well.
Uzbekistan? Seven, all but one stanozolol.
These sorts of numbers underscore two big-picture trends.
The first can be traced to the eruption roughly 10 years ago of the BALCO affair in the United States. That, in turn, prompted a rules change that had the practical effect of swinging would-be cheats away from designer steroids — such as THG, the substance at the heart of the BALCO matter — and back to the basics.
Like stanozolol, oral turinabol or straight testosterone.
The second is an advance in testing technology.
As a German television station reported last year, scientists at the Moscow and Cologne, Germany, labs have developed a new testing procedure — known as the “long-term metabolites method” — to extend the detection window. Officials from those labs told the TV station that a sample that would have produced a negative result as recently as 2012 would in 2013 glow positive more than six months after it was taken.
Two track and field athletes, for instance, tested positive for oral turinabol at last summer’s world championships in Moscow: Ukrainian javelin thrower Roman Avramenko, who finished fifth, and Turkmenistan’s Yelena Ryabova, who failed to make it out of the heats in the women’s 200 meters.
The IAAF, track and field’s governing body, made sure everyone knew about these positive tests.
The IWF?
That statement about “punishment”? Indeed, it was put out front Wednesday on the IWF website. But not under “doping” or “Azerbaijan” or another similarly suggestive keyword. The trick was to look for “official communication.”
The statement named no names of anyone sanctioned. Nor to be found was the name of the IWF president, its general secretary or anyone from its executive office.
Too, the statement leaned heavily toward passive voice: “In this process, in 2013 several anti-doping violations were disclosed …”
Even allowing that it took nearly an entire year — the 2013 European championships were staged last April, in Albania — why no allocation now of responsibility for the disqualification of an entire team and its marks?
More of the same: “The relevant procedures of anti-doping violations by multiple weightlifters from Azerbaijan have now been closed.” By whom? When? How? Were there appeals? Were any appeals contested?
The statement said immediately thereafter that those lifters who tested positive at the 2013 European championships and subsequently in out-of-competition testing had been sanctioned and results lists updated. Incredibly, the statement did not identify the lifters or provide links to the “before” or “after” results.
The notice also said the athletes and the Azerbaijan Weightlifting Federation itself had received punishment “following the sanctions stipulated in the IWF Anti-Doping Policy.” Did that mean the federation was fined? How much? The policy suggests that nine or more violations equals a $500,000 fine.
If so, when is the fine due? How will anyone know the federation paid such a fine? If it’s not paid, will the Azeri federation — as the policy suggests — be suspended for four years? Again, how will anyone know? What would trigger the start of such a suspension?
The statement went on to say, “The Weightlifting Federation of Azerbaijan is one of the most active also as the home of a Weightlifting Academy and host of various significant events. Drawing the conclusions of last year they now have the obligation to turn a new page and build a new, clean national team.”
What about any of this offers the sort of transparency and forthright reporting an international federation dedicated to genuinely and meaningfully reporting and addressing, much less cleaning up, its significant doping issues would present?
As a start, the rules mandate that the names of athletes who are sanctioned be made public.
So here, via cross-referencing in the IWF website, are the nine Azeri lifters sanctioned in 2013. All, according to the site, tested positive for the steroid dehydromethyltestosterone. That steroid’s brand name, according to three knowledgeable figures in the anti-doping community: oral turinabol.
The list from the European championships:
— Valentin Hristov. Just 19, born in Bulgaria, he won bronze in the bantamweight class at the London 2012 Games.
— Intiqam Zairov. A 28-year-old London 2012 Olympian.
— Sardar Hasanov. Also 28, another London 2012 Olympian.
— Zulfugar Suleymanov, 31, who missed the London Games because of a prior ban.
— Silviya Angelova, 31.
Also sanctioned in 2013:
— Kamran Ismayilov, 20. The DQ erases results from the European Junior Championships.
— Alona Kiriienko, 26. Gone are her results from the Summer University Games in Kazan, Russia.
— Marziyya Maharramova. When she tested positive last September, she was just 17. She turns 18 on April 14. Her two-year suspension runs until September 2015.
— Kseniia Vyshnytska. Even younger. Her birthday: Jan. 16, 1997. She was 16 last year, just turned 17 a few weeks ago. Her suspension runs until April 2015.
Eight of the nine received two-year suspensions. Suleymanov was banned for life, having been suspended once before.
Ismayilov and Kiriienko were caught in out-of-competition tests. The other seven positives were in-competition tests.
Baku, it should be noted, is due to play host to the 2015 European Games. Those Games are intended to serve as a coming-out party, a symbol of prestige for Azerbaijan.
With Baku aiming yet for bigger things — it has bid for the Summer Games before and presumably has a bid for the 2024 or 2028 Games in its sights — the question is obvious: how can the weightlifting program have been operating so recklessly?
Unlike the United States, where sports and government are separate, in Azerbaijan, the Ministry of Youth and Sports oversees Olympic sport. So the question perhaps ought to be framed differently: who in the Azeri ministry is responsible for the weightlifting program and what did that official know, and when? Further, is it credible to believe the weightlifting program was operating independently of political or governmental control?
If Baku wants to be a serious player on the world stage, it has to take these questions — and provide answers — seriously.
The same applies in equal measure to Kazakhstan. Almaty is firmly in the race for the 2022 Winter Games.
“I know nothing,” Vanev, the Azeri weightlifting coach, was quoted as saying. “That’s all I can say for today. Someone went to the site and there is something written,” apparently a reference to the IWF website.
His quote then concludes with these words, which surely carry unintended meaning: “It boggles the mind.”
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