‘Tremendous coldness’: IOC president condemns Kamila Valieva’s entourage

  • Bach ‘disturbed’ by how ROC athlete was treated by team
  • Valieva, 15, led field into final skate but slipped to fourth

The way 15-year-old Russian skater Kamila Valieva was treated by her coach after her two falls in her figure skating routine on Thursday evening was “chilling” and does not inspire any confidence in her entourage, the International Olympic Committee president Thomas Bach has said.

In an unusually strong intervention, Bach admitted that he was shocked to see the controversial Russian Olympic Committee coach Eteri Tutberidze berate Valieva as she came off the ice, barking at her “why did you stop fighting?” even though she had been under enormous mental stress ever since her positive drugs test was revealed last week.

“I must say I was very disturbed yesterday when I watched the competition on television,” said Bach. “First in her performance, how high the pressure must have been on her. I know from my athlete time a little bit about pressure. But this pressure is beyond my imagination, in particular for a girl of 15 years old.

“To see her struggling on the ice, seeing how she tries to compose herself again and finish her programme, you could see in every movement in the body language, you could feel this was an immense mental stress.

“But this was not all,” Bach added. “When afterwards I saw how she was received by her closest entourage, with what appeared to be a tremendous coldness, it was chilling to see this.

“Rather than giving her comfort, rather than trying to help her, you could feel this chilling atmosphere, this distance. And if you were interpreting the body language, it got even worse because there were even some dismissive gestures I saw on TV.”

The gold medal was won by world champion Anna Shcherbakova, who narrowly pipped her Russian compatriot Alexandra Trusova despite a more conservative free skate routine. Both are 17 years old and also coached by Tutberidze. Afterwards, Trusova was visibly upset by the judging but appeared to get little support from Tutberidze – something Bach also spotted.

“I am pondering whether you could really be this cold to your athlete,” Bach said. “All of this does not give me much confidence in this closest entourage in Kamila, neither with regard in the past nor in the future.”

The World Anti-Doping Agency is now investigating Valieva’s coaches, doctors and other adults around her but Bach admitted that the IOC’s options were “extremely limited”.

“We are not the police,” he said. “We can not interrogate. We can not have a formal prosecution procedure and therefore we need the support of governments. We need to reinforce our efforts to speak to governments so they take disciplinary measures regarding entourages.”

Valieva was allowed to compete in the women’s event after the court of arbitration for sport ruled against re-imposing a provisional suspension on her. That decision came after a week of media scrutiny that followed the news that she had tested positive for angina drug trimetazidine on 8 February, a day after she helped the ROC win the team event.

However Bach accepted that Valieva was unlikely to have taken the banned drug in isolation and stressed it was of “extreme importance” that those around her be properly investigated given her age.

On Saturday Tutberidze insisted that her skater was clean but accepted that the situation was “very controversial and difficult”.

Sign up for our Beijing 2022 briefing with all the news, views and previews for the Games.

When asked if Tutberidze had any place in the Olympics, Bach said: “This is why we have asked for the inquiry to shed light on all this. We trust this will come to light and we will not hesitate to implement the appropriate measures. And these will be tough measures.”

Bach also signalled that the IOC would look into rules regarding age limits for adult competition, as well as whether minors should face the same doping penalties as senior athletes. But he added “this needs careful deliberation”.

The IOC president’s comments provoked an angry response from Russia’s deputy prime minister Dmitry Chernyshenko, who told Inside The Games: “We are deeply disappointed to see an IOC president weave his own fictional narrative on the feelings of our athletes, and then present these publicly as the voice of the IOC. This is frankly inappropriate and wrong.”

Contributor

Sean Ingle in Beijing

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Kamila Valieva’s Olympic gold hopes vanish amid ROC anger, tears and joy | Sean Ingle
A tearful Valieva slipped to fourth, Anna Shcherbakova quietly won gold and runner-up Alexandra Trusova wept in a chaotic, cruel figure skating finale

Sean Ingle at the Capital Indoor Stadium

17, Feb, 2022 @2:05 PM

Article image
The Kamila Valieva case shows yet again that the IOC is betraying teen athletes
This rotten organisation stood by while the 15-year-old skater and her Olympic dreams were publicly crushed, says campaigner Sarah Klein

Sarah Klein

24, Feb, 2022 @2:39 PM

Article image
Kamila Valieva: Russian skater in gold medal position in individual event
With the world’s spotlight on her Kamila Valieva produced a stunning performance but not all her competitors were impressed

Sean Ingle at Capital Indoor Stadium

15, Feb, 2022 @3:22 PM

Article image
The Olympics face an existential crisis. An American-led effort could save them | Steve Mesler and Jeff Porter
The Olympic movement risks lurching even further into an existential crisis if major problems aren’t addressed, and many of the levers for change lie in Americans’ hands

Steve Mesler and Jeff Porter

21, Feb, 2022 @10:00 AM

Article image
Winter Olympics day 11: Valieva leads after short program – as it happened
Kamila Valieva took to the ice amid a swirl of controversy and elsewhere there were golds, blunders and much more

Adam Collins, Emma Kemp, Beau Dure and Luke McLaughlin

15, Feb, 2022 @3:13 PM

Article image
Kamila Valieva horror show proves the price of Olympic gold is too high | Cath Bishop
This is not a problem happening just in Russia – a win-at-all-costs mentality is affecting young athletes more than ever

Cath Bishop

21, Feb, 2022 @7:00 PM

Article image
IOC denies Richardson’s accusations of double standards over Valieva
The IOC has dismissed claims that a double standard was applied to US sprinter Sha’Carri Richardson compared to Russian skater Kamila Valieva

Sean Ingle in Beijing

16, Feb, 2022 @7:06 AM

Article image
Kamila Valieva: Cas clearance for skater sparks anger at Winter Olympics
The 15-year-old Russian figure skater Kamila Valieva is free to continue competing at the Beijing Winter Olympics

Sean Ingle in Beijing

14, Feb, 2022 @12:30 PM

Article image
Kamila Valieva’s historic quadruple jump seals team figure skating gold
Valieva’s brilliance caps a runaway gold for the Russian Olympic Committee with the United States taking silver

Bryan Armen Graham in Beijing

07, Feb, 2022 @4:31 PM

Article image
Beijing 2022 organisers claim stories of Xinjiang human rights abuses are ‘lies’
The Winter Olympics have plunged been into further controversy after Beijing 2022 spokesperson Yan Jiarong dismissed human rights violations among the Uyghur muslim population as ‘lies’

Sean Ingle in Beijing

17, Feb, 2022 @7:41 AM