The 2016 athletics season in India is still
continuing. And as it invariably happens, the international calendar has practically
wound up barring the road races.
The Olympic year expectedly produced a string of “world-class
performances” by Indian athletes. Administrators and fans alike expressed their happiness at the perceived
strides the Indian athletes had made in the run-up to the Rio Games.
Coaches and administrators were not wary of
forecasting “several” places in the final at Rio for the Indian athletes.
Can there be a medal, too? The question naturally came
up.
They did not rule it out, pointing out that a medal depended on a given day’s
form. Anything could happen, they assured us. The Sports Authority of India
(SAI) looked at a few charts and graphs and came to the conclusion a medal or two was possible.
The biggest Indian athletics squad numbering 36 (two
athletes, shot putter Inderjeet Singh and sprinter Dharambir Singh, were
suspended following positive dope results) in the largest Indian contingent for
the Olympics, at 118, was entered. Some of them spent months abroad in training
camps that ostensibly provided ideal weather, accommodation and food.
Beats the Sydney number
The 36 beat the 29 that went to Sydney for the 2000
Games. Just as in Sydney, where K. M. Beenamol was the lone Indian athlete to
cross the first round, in Rio, too, only one athlete came through the
preliminary round. Steeplechaser Lalita Babar was a proud 10th-place
finisher in the Olympics.
Racewalker Manish Singh Rawat, with a 13th-place
finish in 20km, and marathon runners T. Gopi and Kheta Ram, finishing 25th and
26th, were other honourable exceptions from the Indian side in an otherwise dismal
performance.
So, how did so many of our athletes record ‘phenomenal
performances’ at home and abroad in order to qualify for Olympics and then fail
so stunningly in Rio?
Some of us had reservations about at least some of the marks achieved by Indian athletes prior to Rio.
Were these performances “genuine” was a question that came up rather
disturbingly.
No additional athletes, barring steeplechaser Sudha
Singh had qualified from domestic meets this year in April and May, and through
competitions in Poland, Chinese Taipei and Kyrgyzstan till the last week of
June. Then the rush started culminating with the Bengaluru meet on the final
day of Olympic qualification on July 11.
Now, less than a month after the Olympics, a few of
the prominent international statisticians have also raised doubts about such
performances. Not just from India but from other countries as well.
Mirko Jalava, who runs the very popular, highly acclaimed, Tilastopaja.com, Finland, that provides huge statistical data on athletics has
listed as many as 39 results under the ‘doubtful/suspicious’ category that led
to Olympic qualification.
Three of the ‘suspicious’ results are by Indian
athletes, two at Almaty, Kazakhstan in June and one at Bengaluru in July.
The doubtful Indian marks
The Indian marks listed are the 8.19m in long jump by
Ankit Sharma and the 23.03s for the 200m by Srabani Nanda in Almaty, and the
17,30m achieved by Renjith Maheswary in triple jump in Bengaluru.
One more Indian result, that of 11.24s for the 100m by
Dutee Chand in Almaty, has been mentioned among others as a possible
consequence of a “faulty” timing system in the Kozanov memorial meet in the
Kazakhstan city.
The only “consolation” for Indians in this assessment
could be the fact that many other countries with several “doubtful” results
have been listed by Jalava who has forwarded his list to the working group
appointed by the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) to
look into these qualification marks achieved apparently through dubious means.
Mercifully, even the Athletics Federation of India
(AFI), one heard, has raised “doubts” about some of the marks achieved by
Indian athletes towards Rio qualification in its post-Olympics assessment.
“My
suspicions are purely statistical, nothing to do with doping.,” Jalava wrote in an e-mail to this correspondent
the other day.
Tilastopaja removes all doubtful results
Tilastopaja.com has removed all the ‘suspicious’ results
including those by Dutee Chand (11.30s and 11.24s for 100m in Almaty on June
25) and Dharambir Singh (20.45s for 200 in Bengaluru on July 11) and
categorized them as “irregular/doubtful”. (Dharambir’s timing in any case is likely to
be disqualified following his positive dope test)
These marks will no longer be listed at least on Tilastopaja
as personal best or season best or national record (where applicable).
What decision the IAAF would take in respect of such doubtful
marks is yet to be seen. The IAAF website does list all these marks as valid
and regular.
Jalava’s “suspicious” list comprises nine athletes from
Uzbekistan, six from Kazakhstan, five from Armenia, four from Moldova, three
each from India and Iran, two from Georgia and one each from Bermuda, Bahrain,
Costa Rica, Egypt, Jamaica, Saudi Arabia and Samoa.
A total of 52 results (not necessarily Olympic qualification
marks) have been flagged by Jalava as “suspicious” with Kazakhstan alone
contributing 13 of them, all but one from Almaty!
The Finn makes these observations in respect of Indian
athletes:
Men: Long jump
Name
Country Standard
Ankit
Sharma IND 8.19 -16
Suspicious
mark: 8.19 +0.1 Almaty KAZ 26 June 2016
Best
outside suspicious: 7.92 0.0 Patiala IND 6 May 2016
Perf
Rio 2016: 7.67 +0.1 Rio de Janeiro BRA 12 August 2016
Sequence
of marks 2016: 7.89 – 7.66 – 7.81 – 7.76 – 7.92 – 7.67 – 8.19 (incl.
8.19-8.17-8.14) – 7.76 – 7.67 (Rio)
Reason for suspicion: No jumps further
than 7.92 outside Almaty in 2016, then suddenly three marks at 8.14 or
better.
Triple jump
Renjith
Maheswary IND 17.30 -16
Suspicious
mark: 17.30 +0.9 Bangalore IND 11 July 2016
Best
outside suspicious: 16.56 Hyderabad IND 29 June 2016
Perf
Rio 2016: 16.13 +0.5 Rio de Janeiro BRA 15 August 2016
Sequence
of marks 2016: 16.45 – 16.16 – 16.35 – 16.47 – 16.56 – 16.43 – 17.30
(incl. 17.30-16.93-16.75-16.55) – 16.13 (Rio, incl.
16.13-15.99-15.80).
Reason for suspicion: Result so much
further than other meetings in 2016. Result achieved on the last day of
qualification, July 11th.
Women: 200m
Srabani
Nanda IND 23.07 -16
Suspicious
mark: 23.07 +0.7 Almaty KAZ 26 June 2016
Best
outside suspicious: 23.36 0.0 New Delhi IND 30 April 2016
Perf
Rio 2016: 23.58 -0.1 Rio de Janeiro BRA 15 August 2016
Sequence
of marks 2016: 23.91 – 23.43 – 23.85 – 23.57 – 23.70 – 23.36 – 23.39 – 24.85
– 23.55 – 23.84 – 23.70 – 23.83 – 23.34 – 23.07 –
23.58 (Rio).
Reason for suspicion: Entry standard
achieved in Almaty is out of sequence. Three previous meets
23.84-23.70-23.83, then suddenly 23.07 and back to 23.58 in Rio. Looks like a
possible timing problem, like in the W 100m in the same meet: Three best
Almaty vs Rio: Zyabkina KAZ 22.66-23.34 Safronova KAZ 22.95-23.29 Nanda IND
23.07-23.58.
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Rima
Kashafutdinova KAZ 1 11.31 -16
Suspicious
mark: 11.31 +1.2 Almaty KAZ 25 June 2016
Best
outside suspicious: 11.63 0.0 Bishkek KGZ 18 June 2016
Perf
Rio 2016: 11.84 +0.3 Rio de Janeiro BRA 12 August 2016
Sequence
of marks 2016: 11.67 – 11.63 – 11.46 – 11.31 –
11.84 (Rio).
Reason for suspicion: Bettered 100m
personal best by 0.32 seconds in one competition, which is impossible. There
is a possibility, that the timing was faulty in Almaty in this race. Almaty
vs Rio Zyabkina KAZ Almaty 11.15- Rio 11.69 Chand IND 11.24-11.69 Jassim BRN
11.26-11.72 Kashafutdinova KAZ 11.31-11.84. The differences are 0.44, 0.45,
0.46 and 0.52. Zyabkina’s best before Almaty was 11.27 in May and she ran
11.38 in Bishkek just a week before the 11.15. She then continued with 11.63
in France before 11.69 in Rio.
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Jalava’s compilation gives a deep insight into the possible
manipulation that goes on to facilitate Olympic qualification.
Bahrain’s Hajar Saad Al-Khaldi for example is shown to have
improved her PB in women’s 100m from 11.91s in 2015 to 11.28s in Sofia,
Bulgaria, on June 18 this year (OG standard 11.32s). She clocked 11.59s in Rio.
Moldovan woman shot putter Dimitriana Surdu jumped from her
PB of 15.04 in 2015 to 17.85 in May this year to cross the Olympic standard of
17.75. Then came back to her original standard of 15.25 in Rio.
Discus thrower Nataliya Strutulat of Moldova did a 61.85 at
home (OG standard 61.00). Her best outside her home this season was 57.52m.
Predictably she slumped to 53.27m in Rio.
Hubbeling also raises doubts
Meanwhile, Heinrich
Hubbeling, the German statistician who brings out the annual Asian athletics
rankings, has also brought out a list of ‘doubtful’ results. But this list is
small, 13, and it does not mention an Indian result.
Hubbeling said some of the qualifiers managed standards in
preliminaries but stayed away from finals. A few of them tried to hide their form in
Olympics by not finishing their competitions there.
Like Jalava, Hubbeling has also removed “doubtful” results
from his top lists and is waiting to see whether the IAAF would be doing
something in this respect.
Hubbeling’s list (matching that by Jalava) comprises five
athletes each from Uzbekistan and Armenia and one each from Georgia, Kazakhstan
and Tajikistan.
A few samples from the list:
Uzbek Leonid Andreyev, a 33-year-old decathlete whose best
was 7879 in 2014 achieved 8250 points in Tashkent (Olympic standard 8100)
including five individual personal bests with that in high jump going up from
1.99m to 2.09m!
Amaliya Sharoyan, a woman long jumper from Armenia, registered
6.72m (standard 6.70m) at Elbasan, Albania, on May 21, did 6.15 at Pitesti,
Romania, on June 6 and then managed 5.95 in Rio Olympics!
Georgian shot putter Benik Abramyan recorded 20.54 in Almaty
on May 24 to improve his PB from 18.48 in 2011. (OG standard 20.50m). He had
18.72m in the Olympics. Incidentally he had served a two-year doping ban from 2012.
Uzbek woman 400m hurdler Natalya Asanova improved from her
2012 PB of 56.85 to 56.19 (OG standard 56.20). She had marks between 58 and 59
during the season except for one more of 56.33 in Tashkent three days before her
Dushanabe PB. She timed 62.37s in Rio!
All these indicate, not for the first time though, how
Olympic qualification standards are achieved in athletics. You can qualify
through any national-level or any small international-level meet. Unlike in
swimming, for example, there is no requirement of a pre-designated meet.
The AFI could arrange a few international relay races at
short notice in Hyderabad and Bengaluru just in time to beat the July 11
deadline for our teams to qualify. Relay qualification earlier used to be through
IAAF-designated meets. Not that it made qualification foolproof.
Unless the IAAF stipulates conditions for getting national
and international meets approved for the purpose of qualification for Olympics
(or World championships) “world-class” performances would be churned out in
Dushanbe, Tashkent, Almaty and Hyderabad but quite predictably such athletes
would fail miserably in the championships.
Sometimes these performances may be No. 1 or 2 or 3 in the
world that season. That should not mislead the fans. But they do get misled.
That is where the credibility of the sport gets eroded.
If the credibility has to improve, qualification process has
to be tightened. Let National federations invite IAAF-appointed technical
delegates with impeccable credentials to oversee qualification meets. And of
course there has to be mandatory dope-testing under the supervision of
IAAF/WADA delegates.
Well, they might say this could turn out to be very
expensive. Yes, spend the money to protect clean athletes; spend it to uphold
the purity of sport, spend it to bolster the credibility of the sport.
2 comments:
dear sir,
what ever the doubt you had raised is the strongly doubt of every lay man who love towards indian athletics. if person like us love to hear that " 100% DOPE FREE INDIAN ATHLETICS"... but it will be dream like every indian dreaming that AN INDIAN IN THE OLYMPIC PODIUM...... its quite unbeliveable that still the stake holders of indian athletics openly support and extend all possible for drug cheaters. i dont know when this long standing issue of doping in indian athletics will be in check. may be your words in this regard is an eye opener. i hope so.... if it is happen as soon as possible it will be excellent for our motherland as wellas indian athletics. our heart felt congrats for your hard work to reveal this truth in public. thanks alot...
Thank you Sreeni.
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