Russian boxers to boycott Tokyo 2020 Olympics if four-year ban on sport is not lifted

Entire Russian boxing team has voted in favour of boycotting Tokyo 2020 if they cannot compete for their country as they do not want to become neutral athletes

James Ellingworth
Wednesday 11 December 2019 10:12 EST
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WADA bans Russia from all global sports: 'This is a ban against Russia that protects the rights of Russian assets'

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Russian boxers will only take part in the Tokyo 2020 Olympics if doping sanctions forcing them to compete as neutral athletes are overturned, the general secretary of the Russian Boxing Federation told The Associated Press on Wednesday.

Umar Kremlev said he has spoken with the Olympic boxing team and they "unanimously" rejected the conditions laid out by the World Anti-Doping Agency as punishment for manipulating doping data.

The Wada sanctions, announced on Monday, ban the use of the Russian team name, flag or anthem at a range of major sports competitions over the next four years, including next year's Olympics.

"They said we won't go without our flag and anthem," Kremlev said. "We aren't going for medals, but for that feeling that I brought the highest honour home for my country."

If the sanctions aren't overturned, Russian boxers would prefer to turn pro rather than compete at the Olympics, Kremlev said.

"A world champion [in professional boxing] is better known than an Olympic champion," Kremlev said, adding the Russian anthem would be played before pro title fights.

Kremlev said boxers are being asked to shoulder the blame for offences committed in other sports. He said they would still stay at home even if Russia's athletes in other sports decided to take part.

"If other sports are guilty and people have breached the Wada code, why are we punished?" he said. "We are for honest sport and against doping. We want our sport to be clean ... If someone breaks the rules, we push them out."

Russia is a major power in amateur and Olympic boxing. It hosted both men's and women's world championships this year, finishing at the top of the medals table at the women's event and second in the men's championships. The International Olympic Committee has taken direct charge of boxing at the Tokyo Olympics after criticising chronic financial problems and infighting at the International Boxing Association.

Russian Sports Minister Pavel Kolobkov talked up Russia's chances of overturning the Wada sanctions Wednesday.

"I think that there is every basis to appeal the decision, because our experts have presented their position, and they have the same database as Wada does," Kolobkov said in comments reported by state news agency Tass. "There is an answer to every question and the whole process is ahead of us."

The official decision on whether to dispute the sanctions will be made on 19 December by the Russian anti-doping agency's supervisory board, but senior figures, including Russian president Vladimir Putin, have signalled their preference for taking the matter to the Court of Arbitration for Sport.

AP

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