Advertisement
Advertisement
Rio 2016 Olympic Games
Get more with myNEWS
A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you
Learn more
Darya Klishina competes in the women's long jump event at the National track and field championships at a stadium in Cheboksary, Russia, in June. Photo: AP

IAAF clears US-based Russian long jumper Darya Klishina for Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro

The Russian track and field team is currently suspended by the International Association of Athletics Federation over state-sponsored doping

US-based long jumper Darya Klishina became the first Russian athlete to be cleared to compete at the Olympic Games, but the fate of pole vault star Yelena Isinbayeva was still up in the air.

The International Association of Athletics Federation (IAAF), which has suspended the Russian track and field team over state-sponsored doping, said it had given the go ahead for Klishina to compete in international competition as a neutral, ahead of the Rio de Janeiro Games next month.

“The IAAF Doping Review Board has today agreed that Russian long jump athlete Darya Klishina meets the exceptional eligibility criteria to compete in international competition as a neutral athlete,” the IAAF said in a statement.

Darya Klishina in August 2011. Photo: E{A

“The Doping Review Board received a total of 136 applications from Russian athletes seeking exceptional eligibility to compete in an individual capacity,” the statement said.

The Russian Olympic Committee said that of the 136 who applied to the IAAF to compete, only Klishina had been accepted.

“Rejections have come for everyone, except for Klishina,” Alexandra Brilliantova, the head of the Olympic Committee’s legal department, told state-run TASS news agency.

Among those rejected were gold medallist pole vaulter Isinbayeva and world champion hurdler Sergey Shubenkov, trainers for the two athletes – both based in Russia – confirmed.

Russia's pole vaulter Yelena Isinbayeva reacts after her jump at the National track and field championships at a stadium in Cheboksary, Russia, in June. Photo: AP

Russian track and field stars, including Isinbayeva, still hoping to go to Rio now hope that the Court of Arbitrations for Sport (Cas) will overturn the blanket ban.

Russia last month had their suspension over allegations of institutionalised and pervasive doping upheld by the IAAF, athletics’ ruling body.

‘Clean’ Russian athletes can compete in Rio Olympics as ‘neutrals’

But it left the door ajar to some Russian competitors not tainted by doping to compete as neutrals in Rio.

Cas said on Monday it will decide whether to overturn the ban by July 21, two weeks before the start of the Rio Games.

Post