Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 25 – A British
newspaper is reporting that FIFA, the world governing body for soccer, is now
investigating all the members of the Russian team in the last world cup competition
for doping, an investigation that Moscow is dismissing as a witch hunt but one
that could increase pressure on FIFA to strip Moscow of the right to hold the
2018 World Cup.
London’s Daily Mail reports today
that “every member of Russia’s World Cup team is under investigation in a
doping probe” by FIFA. That includes “the entire Russian squad for Rio 2014”
and “a further 11” who are currently playing (dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4635918/Russia-s-World-Cup-team-investigation-doping.html).
As the paper points out, this is the
first indication that the doping scandal in which Russian teams in the Sochi
Olympiad were caught has spread to soccer, a development that if FIFA concludes
that is true will put enormous pressure on the international body to strip
Moscow of the right to hold the World Cup competition next year.
Not surprisingly, Vitaly Mutkov,
Russia’s deputy prime minister, president of the Russian Football Union, and the
man who led Russia’s defense against doping charges in other sports until that
became unsustainable, has denounced the London paper’s report as nonsense and
declared that doping has never been a problem in Russian soccer (tass.ru/sport/4364115).
But
if Mutko is confident at least for now and for public consumption that the
story is untrue, many Russian outlets appear less certain and are openly
warning that this latest report could cost Moscow the right to host the 2018
World Cup, an event that Vladimir Putin has made second only to the Sochi
Olympics in importance for showing Russia’s return to the world stage.
One
news outlet said that the 2018 competition was “on the brink” of being taken
away from Russia as many activists have demanded for some time (lenta.ru/news/2017/06/25/doping/).
Others were somewhat less apocalyptic but quite concerned. (See, for example, echo.msk.ru/news/2006580-echo.html
and gazeta.ru/sport/news/2017/06/25/n_10222229.shtml).
No comments:
Post a Comment