At
least 30 sports, including football, covered up samples involving more than
1,000 athletes between 2011 and 2015, according to the McLaren
report.
The Mail on Sunday has said Fifa was investigating if Russia's
2014 World Cup squad were part of the programme.
However
Fifa says no players from the competition returned a positive test.
"Fifa
has simply confirmed that, in close collaboration with Wada [World Anti-Doping
Agency], it is still investigating the allegations involving football players
in the so-called McLaren report," said a spokesman from world football's
governing body.
"However,
Fifa did not refer to any particular players, since it cannot comment on the
status of ongoing investigations."
The
second of two McLaren reports, led by Canadian law professor and sports lawyer
Dr Richard McLaren, was published in December 2016.
It
alleged that Russian authorities helped those athletes taking banned drugs to
avoid being caught by swapping samples.
But
Fifa said that samples taken from players at the 2014 World Cup, including the
full Russian squad, were sent to a Wada-accredited laboratory in Lausanne,
Switzerland.
It
added that the same procedure is being applied for this year's Confederations
Cup, which is being held in Russia as a dress rehearsal for the 2018 World Cup.
"As
far as the Fifa Confederations Cup is concerned, every participating player has
been tested through blood and urine in unannounced controls," added Fifa.
"Both
the results of the unannounced and the post-match tests have been negative so
far."
Professor
McLaren confirmed that 33 football players, including some foreigners, were
listed in his report, although no other details were revealed with information
passed on to federations and regulatory bodies.
"There
have never been and will never be any problems with doping in our football -
our team are permanently being tested, they undergo doping tests after every
match," Russia's deputy prime minister Vitaly Mutko told TASS news agency.
The
McLaren reports looked into allegations made by Dr Grigory Rodchenkov, a
director of the anti-doping laboratory at the Sochi Winter Olympics in 2014.
The
first McLaren report said positive
drug tests were
secreted through "mouse holes" and swapped for clean negative ones.
Russia
were banned from the 2016 Olympics after the allegations over doping and will
miss this summer's World Championships.
No comments:
Post a Comment