Saturday, December 17, 2016

Doping scandal: "Russian orienteering athletes participation in IOF events is not restricted and is welcomed", the IOF says



Part two of Richard McLaren's report for the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) into doping problems in Russian sport, which was released on 9th December, has clarified the conclusions reached in part one, which was made public in July. Analyzed the new release, IOF keeps its statement on the case and “has full confidence in Russian orienteering athletes and IOF event organizers”.


A second investigation commissioned by the World Anti-Doping Agency has revealed that more than 1,000 athletes were involved in a state-run doping system in Russia. The findings come in the second part of an investigation by Canadian lawyer Richard McLaren, who announced the results of his inquiry in London on Friday. His second report – which comes after WADA extended his mandate in July – confirmed the findings of the first report while revealing more about a system of covering up tests that was refined over time.

“The results of the forensic and laboratory analysis initiated by my team established the conspiracy that was perpetrated between 2011 and 2015,” McLaren said. “It is impossible to know how deep and how far back a conspiracy goes. For years, international sports competitions have unknowingly been hijacked by the Russians. Coaches and athletes have been playing on an uneven field. Sports fans and spectators have been deceived.” Most notably, he said more than 1,000 Russian Olympians and Paralympians – in summer and winter sports – were identified “as being involved in or benefiting from manipulation to conceal positive doping tests.”


How did it start?

Yuliya Stepanova, a Russian middle-distance runner, together with her husband, Vitaly Stepanov, who worked for Russia’s anti-doping agency from 2008 to 2011, spoke out in 2014 about a sophisticated, state-run doping system within Russia. The couple’s detailed accusations set off a series of investigations and additional whistle-blower accounts that have roiled global sports. She told the German public broadcaster ARD that she had been extorted and pressured to take drugs, and she provided recordings suggesting she was far from alone. The Stepanovs fled Russia in 2014, and they are living in the United States. The report also follows on charges made by Grigory Rodchenkov, a laboratory director in Sochi. Rodchenkov told the New York Times that he was ordered to replace tainted urine samples provided by top Russian competitors with clean ones.

The World Anti-Doping Agency was created in 1999 through a collective initiative led by the International Olympic Committee (IOC). Its mandate is to promote, co-ordinate and monitor the fight against drugs in sports. It is headquartered in Montreal with regional offices in Europe, Africa, Asia, Oceania and Latin America. It receives half of its funding from the IOC and the rest from various national governments. The agency is responsible for the World Anti-Doping Code, a document that aims to harmonize anti-doping regulations in all sports and countries. It has been adopted by more than 600 sports organizations as well as the IOC and International Paralympic Committee. The code embodies an annually updated list of prohibited substances. The agency has 34 WADA-accredited labs across the globe to conduct human doping-control sample analyses. It also operates a centralized Web-based Anti-Doping Administration & Management System that stores each athlete’s lab results, whereabouts, therapeutic-use exemptions and rule violations history.


Orienteering, a close-knit family

Immediately following the report, WADA notified the International Federations that they would be receiving gathered evidence for any cases pertaining to athletes within their testing jurisdiction. The respective International Federations would then take over the cases for potential disciplinary actions. On Friday, 16th December, the International Orienteering Federation made clear its position, sustaining its full confidence in both Russian orienteering athletes and Russian IOF event organizers regarding these matters: “Based upon the information received from WADA, the IOF concludes that there is currently no evidence which indicates that orienteering is involved in systematic doping in Russia as reported by the McLaren report, and therefore sees no reason to change the statements made in July/August 2016. Russian orienteering athletes participation in IOF events is not restricted and is welcomed”, can be read at the “IOF Statement regarding the McLaren report part 2” [HERE].

On Monday, 12th December, the International Orienteering Federation had already made public the Anti-Doping Report 2016, making clear that “during 2016, a total of 102 In-Competition Doping Controls were performed by the IOF. The tests were spread over 10 different IOF Major Events in SkiO, FootO, MTBO and TrailO. A total of 84 individual athletes were tested, representing 22 different Nationalities. All but one of these tests produced a negative result. This one test produced an Adverse Analytical Finding for a substance which was covered by a Therapeutic Use Exemption granted to the athlete in question by the IOF Medical Commission, and is therefore not regarded as an Anti-Doping Rule Violation.”


WSOC 2017 in Krasnoyarsk is out of risk

The possibility of withdrawing Krasnoyarsk from the World Ski Orienteering Championships' organization left the Ski Orienteering family on a verge of a nervous breakdown. Also here, the IOF statement is quite clear: “IOF Events planned to be organized in Russia will be completed as planned, and applications for future events from organizers in Russia are welcomed by the IOF. This decision means that the currently planned World Ski Orienteering Championships in Krasnoyarsk, Russia 7th -12th March, 2017 will go ahead as planned.” On Facebook, the American Alexandra Jospe's expressed her satisfaction by the way IOF is dealing with the case: “I really appreciate the IOF doing everything it can to make this a fair sport. You are not facing an easy decision here, and hopefully whatever decision is made is not met with Internet-venom. Thank you for your work!”, she said.

Looking on the subject also on Facebook, the Former European and World Champion in Ski Orienteering, the Russian Tatiana Rvacheva, goes even further: “I think that the only thing that saves our sport from doping in Russia is that we are not an Olympic sport. That's why athletes do orienteering, only because they really love it, not because of money and something else. During all my sport career I was really proud of our international sport-family and our sport, because in Orienteering we don't have doping, we can enjoy and win without it. All members from Russian national team are training separately, we have never been part of the system. I am pretty sure that McLaren report is a half truth and there are a lot of politics, but I hope that this report will initiate great changes in all Russian sport, and government will allocate money for healthy way of life and opportunities to do sport, not only for professional sport. I hope that this situation will change mind of big amount of coaches and athletes who think about which doping is more efficient but don't work too much to find efficient methods of training. But the main thing for us is that McLaren report is far away from the Orienteering World, really far away. I hope we remain the same family with our principals of fair play, our love to what we are doing. And I'm sure in Krasnoyarsk everything will be in high level with fair winners. With a great love to our sport.”


Joaquim Margarido

Friday, December 16, 2016

Interview Olav Lundanes - Achievement of 2016



Lundanes’ achievement, which gave him the award for the best orienteering achievement of 2016, was being the dominant forest orienteer at the World Orienteering Championships with two gold and one silver medal – only some meters in dark green forest from sweeping the table and taking all three forest gold medals. Behind Lundanes and Kyburz – two of the big names in international orienteering the last years, a new star from a young orienteering nation came in third; Roman Ciobanu from Moldova.


Q: Congratulations on being awarded “The Orienteering Achievement of 2016″. What an incredible season for you to be at your best at the most important races of the season! What were your expectations and goals ahead of the season?

Thanks a lot! It is a great honor to win “The Orienteering Achievement of 2016″, since there were so many other nominated runners to fight against. And it is nice that so many people think I deserved it! Before the season I had two main goals: WOC, and to show a high level during the whole season. WOC was of course the most important, and a long time goal for me. I am very happy to have succeeded there, but there are some decisions from the Middle distance I am think a lot about. The last years I have not managed to do many good races or races at all, except from WOC, so although I lost EOC I am happy to have run fast during the whole 2016 season.

Q: What are your main improvements compared to the 2015 season? Is it all about being free from injuries, or have you also taken steps in other areas?

Of course it is a lot about that I have been healthier than last season. But I have, as everybody else, been sick and injured also this year, and I think I have made big progress in the way I handle it. I know more about which trainings are most important to prioritize, when I can’t do everything I want. And I manage to stay calm and get the best out of the situation even when the situation is not optimal. Since I have managed to do more and better training, I therefore have managed to lift my physical level. The technical trainings [the last year] have been a lot WOC specific, and of course I have made progress in that terrain, but that will not help me so much next year.

Q: Can you name three key persons who were important for your achievements in 2016?

My girlfriend Ida is the most important person for my achievements, because she is always supporting me both practical things and with mental support when that is needed. It is hard to name anybody else, because there are so many that have a part in my medals. But of course the support from the rest of my family is important, and I have to thank both Halden SK and the other runners on the national team.

Q: The WOC relay victory was very much a team effort. How did you work and train as a team in order to prepare for that race?

It has been a long and very bumpy road to that victory, and I think all three of us where very happy with the gold medal. We have discussed a lot how we want to run the relay, and we have had some good trainings on the camps. We managed to do good races on a day where the terrain suited us, there was some real forkings for once and where the other teams made some mistakes. That was enough this time, but we have to improve to win in Estonia.

Q: You have moved from Norway to Finland ahead of the next season. How is life in Finland so far? Do you plan do to anything differently in your training for the upcoming season?

So far I am very happy with my life in Finland! It is a very nice training environment and good trainings, and it is also nice to try something new and different. There are a lot of training possibilities to choose from, and it is impossible and not so smart to join everything. And everybody who ran Jukola 2015 know that the terrain is nice, so I try to enjoy all the new maps. The language is the only problem, it is a bit difficult since I don’t speak fluent Finnish yet:) I think the home advantage was an important part of the success at WOC this year, and I have to improve if I want to be on the top also next year. I will of course change part of my training to be as good as possible in Estonia. I have started with some more strength trainings and I will do some faster intervals. But I will keep most of it as I have done it before, because I know it is working well. I have also done some measures to avoid some of the illness periods I have had the last years.

Q: What do your days look like now in the winter time?

No days are like the other, but in many cases I wake up at 7.30, and then we have some common training in the morning. When I come home I eat, sleep, relax and eat again before the second training. In the evening I eat, and then do some training analyze/planning/organizing etc. And then I eat again and sleep. There is not so much special happening, but I think it is a good life to improve as an orienteer

Q: Any final words to your fans out there?

Thanks a lot to everybody that has voted for me! And I wish everybody a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Orienteeringyear! We are doing an amazing sport that we should be very prod of, so enjoy your trainings and races also next year!

Q: Congratulations again – and good luck with your season preparations!

[Press Release: Orienteering Achievement of 2016 / WorldofO.com]

Interview Tove Alexandersson - Achievement of 2016



Alexandersson won the Orienteering Achievement of 2016 award for finally showing that she is the best orienteer in the world on the day when it really counts: Winning both individual forest gold medals at both WOC and EOC after never winning a gold medal at the big championships before. Alexandersson won the award ahead of Emily Kemp (Canada) and Anastasia Denisova (Belarus) – the very best orienteer in the world ahead of two new stars who both wrote history for their nations at this years’ World Orienteering Championships with best-ever results.


Q: Congratulations on being awarded “The Orienteering Achievement of 2016″. What an incredible season for you to be on the very top of the podium in the most important races of the season! What were your expectations and goals ahead of the season?

Thank you! What I wanted most was to be able to run all important races and feel prepared and ready at the start line. The second thing I wanted was to win, I wanted to win in both EOC and WOC and the World Cup in both orienteering and ski-orienteering. At least it was my dream to do that.

Q: You skipped the sprint discipline completely(?) this season - and it could look like that is part of the reason for your success. What is your thought about that?

I wanted to be as good as possible in the forest races and felt that it was a risk to also run the sprint. It was safer to just focus on the forest but I hope I will be able to do top races in both sprint and forest disciplines.

Q: What are your main improvements compared to the 2015 season? Is it all about being free from injuries, or have you also taken some steps on the mental side?

I have taken some steps on the mental side but I think it’s the o-technique I have improved most during the season.

Q: Can you name three key persons who were important for your achievements in 2016?

The whole team around me is very important. The national teams and my clubs in both orienteering and ski-orienteering, Anneli Östberg who has coached me since I was junior and of course my family.

Q: The Swedish success is also a team effort. How do you work and train as a team? Can you give an example of how some of the others in the team have helped you get better?

The atmosphere in the team is fantastic and makes me always looking forward to the training camps and competitions. We always help each other to get better and to do good performances.

Q: Do you plan do to anything differently in your training for the upcoming season? Will you still focus on the same disciplines where you achieved such fantastic results at the World Champs?

This season I was very focused on the orienteering technique and running in relevant terrain for WOC. For next season I will focus a bit more on running on harder surfaces and hopefully improve my physical capacity in both the forest and sprint.

Q: Big achievements is one thing - but to get as far as you have, I guess it is important to have fun with what you are doing as well. What is the most fun you have had during orienteering the past year?

I have had so much fun during the year. Of course the championships have been great but if I have to choose something other, it will be my first orienteering competition of the year. For me it’s always a bit special with the first competition, especially if I come directly from the snow and winter. The competition was the first day of NAOM in Portugal. It was fantastic terrain, a really good middle distance course and I just had the o-technical flow I wish for. A perfect orienteering day and a good start of the season.

Q: What do your days look like now in the winter time? Have you still got full focus on ski-orienteering?

I focus on both ski-orienteering and orienteering during the winter, so the training at home is a mix between skiing and running. I really like the winter training because I can train much more compared to if I’m just running. I also have quite many training camps and not so much time to do other things than training.

Q: Any final words to your fans out there?

I want to thank everyone who have supported me and cheered on all races.

Q: Congratulations again – and good luck with your season preparations!

[Press Release: Orienteering Achievement of 2016 / WorldofO.com]

Alexandersson and Lundanes: Orienteering Achievement of 2016



Olav Lundanes (Norway) and Tove Alexandersson (Sweden) have been awarded with “The Orienteering Achievement of 2016″ titles in the women’s and men’s class, respectively! The vote has been decided by the big international readership of WorldofO.com – nearly 4500 unique votes from around 60 different countries have been delivered.


Alexandersson won the award for finally showing that she is the best orienteer in the world on the day when it really counts: Winning both individual forest gold medals at both WOC and EOC after never winning a gold medal at the big championships before. Alexandersson won the award ahead of Emily Kemp (Canada) and Anastasia Denisova (Belarus) – the very best orienteer in the world ahead of two new stars who both wrote history for their nations at this years’ World Orienteering Championships with best-ever results.

In the men’s class it was even tighter, with less than 40 votes separating Olav Lundanes and Matthias Kyburz (Switzerland). Lundanes’ achievement which gave him the award for the best orienteering achievement of 2016 was being the dominant forest orienteer at the World Orienteering Championships with two gold and one silver medal – only some meters in dark green forest from sweeping the table and taking all three forest gold medals. Behind Lundanes and Kyburz – two of the big names in international orienteering the last years, a new star from a young orienteering nation came in third; Roman Ciobanu from Moldova.


Big thanks go to all of the voters and the event sponsors Five + Five days of Sicily, Scottish 6 Days, Durmitor Orienteering Challenge, Aguiar da Beira “O” Meeting, Antalya Orienteering Festival, OOCup, Wawel Cup, Lipica Open and Danish Spring.


About Orienteering Achievement of 2016


The Orienteering Achievement of the Year is an annual election organized by the largest international orienteering presence - WorldofO.com. In this edition of the Orienteering Achievement of the Year 6 men and 9 women were nominated for their great orienteering achievements. The nominated runners – and stories about why they were nominated – can be found at http://poll.worldofo.com/2016.
  

[Press Release: Orienteering Achievement of 2016 / WorldofO.com]

Thursday, December 15, 2016

Roma Puisiene: "I feel better prepared to face the Vilnius challenge"



The Portuguese Orienteering Blog takes a break, forgetting the athlete's point of view and moving to the other side of the barricade to meet the organizer. Roma Puisiene is our guest today. She was the Event Director of the final round of the 2016 World Cup in MTBO Orienteering and she will be the Event Director of the World MTB Orienteering Championships next year. A long interview where we approach the organizational details of a big competition and where Vilnius, Lithuania, is expected to host the best World Championships ever.


A couple of weeks after the final round of the 2016 World Cup in MTB Orienteering, in Kaunas, I would ask you to recover some memories. What do you keep in mind from those moments?

Roma Puisiene (R. P.) - As we are talking after a great resting holiday with my family, more than two months following the event, all the bad and hard things almost faded away. However, the thing I remember most is the sky-rocking stress level of the last three weeks and during the event. I would compare it with my first professional experience when, freshly from the business school, I was appointed to the executive team to start TELE2 in Lithuania having zero network coverage and just four months to prepare the whole operation. In such cases, I just follow my mantra: “Do the best you can / it will be over one day / think how it would look in your life in a five-year perspective”. Other thing that comes to my mind is the people. It’s really nice to work with an enthusiastic team who believes in Orienteering and devotes its time and energy to make the event as flawless and enjoyable as possible. I love people with this vision, never cutting back on quality, even if, sometimes, the quality standards are just imaginary and the pressure and workload are hardly manageable. I was lucky because most of the team was made up of people like that.

You joined the hashtag “#1weeksleepless” to a picture of yours on Facebook. How was to handle with the pressure at the moment to welcome the best MTB orienteers in the World?

R. P. - It wasn’t the first time facing stressful periods. They come and go, both in professional and private life. I was lucky not being pressed by financial burdens. I had, more or less, a balanced budget and I allowed myself to dream, imagining real people – top athletes (!) -, and trying to see everything from their perspective: how would they like the competition to be organized, what would they value, what would they consider the most important.

Along the organization and preparation process, what difficulties did you find?

R. P. - Personally, the most difficult was the technical part, where I had least control - map making and course setting. I don’t see myself as an expert on those issues, therefore I had to trust the team 100%. There wasn’t too much I could do, I just watched the process and, basically, I didn’t have influence on it. Again, the super motivated part of the team saved the situation. It was also quite complicated to attract sponsorships to Kaunas event. I have never seen so many times the door slam in front of me while trying to persuade companies to sponsor the event. Eventually we got enough to cover the expenses but the process was hard and time consuming.

How do you rate the World Cup round overall?

R. P. - From an organizational point of view, I would rate it 7/10. But that concerns more to the internal organizational processes, like division of responsibilities, deadlines, etc. Wednesday, Thursday and Friday were hectic and crazy days. Sometimes, I lost my manners and screamed like crazy. Sometimes it helped (laughs). Friday was the worst day of all. We had a very tight allocation of mass start minutes and also troubles with SportIdent. It looked, in the beginning of the day, that everything we built was about to collapse. Considering myself being a non-religious person, I was literally praying to all Gods for the correct readouts of SI cards at the elite competitors' returning. Saturday afternoon I started to relax, thinking that everything was fine.

In general it's very complicated to combine two competitions at once – Masters and Elite. The aim was to organize an Orienteering competition where the Masters could enjoy the Elite quality maps and courses, having a good time in well-equipped arenas where they could share their experiences and emotions. We are talking about a World Masters Championships and we wanted them to be treated accordingly. Hope that the long quarantine - hours for some of the competitors - weren't unbearable burden, but quality time together with like-minded people. From a competitive point of view, I believe that we managed to get the best quality of maps and interesting courses.

The event was, for sure, a valuable experience looking forward to the World MTB Orienteering Championships’ next edition, to be held also in Lithuania and again with you as Event Director. From this perspective, how important was this rehearsal and what lessons did you take from it?

R. P. - It was very important. In Kaunas, I took for the first time the challenge to look into a competition from an organizational point of view. Until then, I was enjoying Orienteering as athlete, not caring really much about the organizational issues. It was just a hobby to which I devoted as much time as I wanted. By accepting these organizational challenges, the perspective changed completely. I got to know many aspects of the competition that, usually, aren’t so visible for the participants. I feel better prepared to face the Vilnius challenge, even though in the beginning I was regretting to have accepted the Kaunas project and to double the workload. Eventually it turned out to be a very positive and useful experience. I can recognize the mistakes that we’ve done, I better see the scope of work, the deadlines and the planning’s critical aspects are clearer now and I’m able to plan the team accordingly.

If you had the chance to go back in time, would you do things differently?

R. P. - Yes, I would have improved some planning and team management.

You've been putting a big effort in advertising MTBO in Lithuania, through the social network sites, radios, newspapers, televisions. Are you satisfied with the result? Can one say that MTBO in your country is better known now than it was one year ago?

R. P. - I hope the efforts have had some positive impact. MTBO is a niche sport and to make it known for the public in general is very complicated. On the other hand, we have to ask about the purpose of the sport being known in Lithuania, which is, in my opinion, to attract children and youth to try it. But for this, infrastructures are needed – dedicated coaches, organized trainings and quality national events. By promoting MTBO at this level, I expected that it will increase the number of participants in the National competitions at least 15-20% after Vilnius World Championships. So, at this stage, it’s really hard to say about the efficiency and effectiveness of the communication effort, as Kaunas World Cup was one of the last competitions of the season. We will renew the communication in Spring, promoting Vilnius event and, in Autumn 2017, we’ll be able to count the chickens (laughs).

What World MTB Orienteering Championships will we have next year? What’s the situation about the Championships? Is there any aspect that makes you worried?

R. P. - I'm aiming for the best World Championships ever. The chosen maps are very interesting and challenging. The most challenging part is the Sprint that will take place in the City centre. I suppose it’s the first time ever that a MTBO World Champs arena will be built in the main square of an European Capital. We will try to add a lot of entertainment to the competition, still combining it with good orienteering quality.

Now that 2016 is almost in the end and the new season is right there, full of personal challenges, I would finish by asking you to share your biggest wish.

R. P. - My biggest wish is to stay healthy, to return to MTBO courses and also to be able to keep the promise I made to myself, to be on the triathlon podium in 2018. Finally I have learned to swim more or less properly and drilling the new skills. I'm getting ready for Vilnius 2017, the business expansion is under way, so life is not going to be boring next year (laughs). And the main challenge is to see the WMTBOC 2017 on one of the major sports channels!

Joaquim Margarido