Coe hails progress made by IAAF

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FIRST-PLACED US Noah Lyles (left) holding the trophy after winning in the 100m and speaks with International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) president Sebastian Coe (right) during the podium ceremony of the IAAF Diamond League competition on Thursday. Photo: AFP

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ZURICH: Sebastian Coe admits that athletics’ world governing body was “crumbling” when he took over four years ago, but insists progress has been made on Russian doping and levelling the female playing field by forcing athletes such as Caster Semenya to regulate their testosterone levels. “We’ve covered a lot of ground, there’s no question about that,” IAAF President Coe said in an interview in Zurich, host of the opening Diamond League final.

FIRST-PLACED US Noah Lyles (left) holding the trophy after winning in the 100m and speaks with International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) president Sebastian Coe (right) during the podium ceremony of the IAAF Diamond League competition on Thursday. Photo: AFP

“Some of it because I wanted to make changes… and some of it, I openly admit, was forced upon us. “We’ve made a mountain of changes such as a proper constitution to meet modern demands. The centrepiece of that was the Athletics Integrity Unit (AIU), really the first of its kind in international sport, and that’s working very well.”

Coe, who won 1500m Olympic golds for Britain in 1980 and 1984, beat legendary former Ukrainian pole vaulter Sergey Bubka to take over as head of the International Association of Athletics Federations from  the now-disgraced Senegalese Lamine Diack in 2015.

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It was far from plain sailing for Coe after Diack’s 16-year reign ended in chaos amid accusations he and his son obstructed sanctions against Russia for doping in return for payments. The IAAF suspended Russia in November 2015 after the allegations of state involvement in doping emerged and Russian track and field athletes were banned from competing under their own flag at the 2016 Rio Olympics.

The country was re-admitted to the Olympic fold last year, but the IAAF continues to ban Russian athletes from competing in their national colours. “I see the first four years as being a process of change, time for change, and we needed to do that,” said Coe. “On Russia, we made a judgement early on that this was an issue that could not be ignored. It was not simply because of its high-profile nature, but it also summed up some of the other challenges we had around the way we needed to revisit our whole anti-doping approach.

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“The creation of the taskforce (on Russian doping) has served us well, it’s removed subjectivity,” he said, adding that the process had at times been “heart-pounding”. Russia, Coe said, is “moving in the right direction, but the criteria still need to be met”. There were still concerns about coaches in the system, while the AIU is in the process of analysing materials handed over from Russian anti-doping laboratories.

“Yes, we’ve been tough, but we’ve been tough because we felt that it was in the interests, ultimately, of Russian sports as well as our interests in our own ability to have a level playing field within international sport.” Coe is guaranteed a second fouryear mandate as IAAF president as he is the only candidate in September’s elections. “The next four years, I hope, will clearly be focused on the fun elements, (and we will) turn our attention to what will help our sport grow,” he said. – AFP

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