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SOCHI

Norway skiers miss more medals

Norway's formerly world-beating men's cross country team disappointed once again on Friday, failing to pick up a single medal in the men's classic 15km race.

Norway skiers miss more medals
Martin Johnsrud Sundby after the 15km men's classic. Photo: Heiko Junge MTB/Scanpix
Norway's best hope in the race, Martin Johnsrud Sundby, came a disappointing 13th, leaving Switzerland's Dario Cologna to take gold,  followed by Swedes Johan Olsson and Daniel Richardsson with silver and bronze. 
 
"I have a good explanation: I skied badly," Sundby told Aftenposten after the race.  "I did not deliver at all. Sport is hard and brutal and if you do not have a good day, then you are far down the list in the Olympics." 
 
He told Nettavisen that given the fitness issues faced by Norway's cross-country star Petter Northug, Norway's prospects did not look good for the relay.  
 
"We are far from the favorites now. We are the 'outsiders'," he said. "The Swedes have had three people winning the individual medals, and had a great championship. They are outperforming us. The way I see it they are now the big favorites." 
 
The defeat came as Norway's men's curling team was trounced 9-4 by its main rivals Canada, showing that it takes more than funky trousers to succeed in the sport, and a day after the country's ice-hockey team was defeated by Canada. 
 
Norway's 13 medals puts it in the lead in terms of overall medals won. But both Germany and Switzerland have taken more golds, with seven and five respectively. Norway, Canada, The Netherlands and the US have each won four golds. 

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RUSSIA

CAS to rule on Rio hopes of Russian athletes

The Lausanne-based Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) said on Monday it will decide whether to overturn the ban against Russia's athletics programme by July 21st, two weeks before the start of the Rio Games.

CAS to rule on Rio hopes of Russian athletes
Olympic flags in Rio. Photo: Yasuyoshi Chiba/AFP

The International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) banned Russia's entire track and field federation following revelations of massive, state-sponsored doping.
   
The suspension first announced in November was maintained last month, which appeared to all but crush Russia's hopes of sending athletes to the Games in Rio de Janeiro, which open on August 5th.
   
But the announcement from CAS offers yet another last chance for Russia's disgraced track and field programme.
   
The IAAF, the Russian Olympic Committee (ROC) and 68 Russian athletes have  reached “a specific arbitration agreement” which lets CAS decide on the validity of the IAAF ban, a statement from the Lausanne-based court said.
   
“The parties have agreed to an expedited procedure which should conclude on July 21st 2016,” the statement added.
   
Qualification for most athletics events closes on July 11th.
   
But with the Russian case under intense public scrutiny and facing political pressure from Moscow, the IAAF may retain some flexibility to extend key deadlines.

A new twist

The IAAF ban followed a November report from the World Anti-Doping Agency which said Russia's track and field programme had been corrupted to the point where even clean drug tests were meaningless.
   
When it maintained the ban last month, the IAAF said individual Russian athletes who proved they had not been tainted by the country's tarnished system could still be cleared for Rio.
   
CAS is not going to conduct such a case-by-case review of each athlete, a spokeswoman for the Lausanne-based court, Katy Hogg, told AFP.
   
The issue in the CAS appeal is whether the IAAF has grounds to suspend an entire athletics team, given that such a move invariably results in punishments for individuals with no positive drug tests on their record.
   
Hogg said the court's decision will be narrowly focused on the validity of IAAF competition rule 22.1 which holds that “athletes whose National Federation is suspended by the IAAF are ineligible for competitions.”
   
The ROC and the 68 Russian athletes have specifically asked the court to “order that any Russian athlete who is not currently the subject of any period of ineligibility for the commission of an anti-doping rule violation may participate at the 2016 Olympic Games,” assuming they otherwise qualified.
   
Russian officials have blasted what they call the IAAF's hypocrisy, noting that two American celebrity sprinters — Tyson Gay and Justin Gatlin — will be among a series of athletes competing in Rio who have previously tested positive for doping.

IOC confusion?

International Olympic Committee executives last month said the IAAF had full authority to decide on which athletes can contest in Rio.
   
IOC president Thomas Bach said anyone who gets the green light from the IAAF will be allowed to compete under the Russian flag.
   
That was at odds with the IAAF position: the governing body said that athletes who individually proved they were drug free could compete under a neutral flag, as the Russian track and field federation would remain banned.
   
Several Russian track and field stars have already filed petitions with the IAAF to establish their drug-free credentials.
   
But if CAS overturns the blanket ban, those individual petitions could be rendered meaningless.
   
The court did not provide a list of the 68 athletes involved in the case, but it likely includes most potential Olympians with no positive drug tests on their record.

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