да маразм не маразм, просто сам факт. идиотизм. не думаю конечно что кого то отправят домой)
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Рочев 4-ый в своей профилируещей гонке 15 км классическим ходом

У меня большие сомнения на счёт того, что мужская сборная выиграет ещё какие то медали

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Пылёва дисквалифицирована на 2 года
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Russia's Olga Pyleva has been slapped with a two-year ban by the International Biathlon Union after a positve dope test. The Russian biathlete had already been stripped of her Individual silver medal and expelled from the Games and now looks likely to end her career after the IBU decision on Friday.
"We have had the hearing with the athlete and we spoke to her doctor this morning. The IBU has decided to give a two-year ban to both of them," IBU chief Anders Besseberg said in a statement.
The Russian biathlete had earlier told the panel she had taken the banned substance by mistake to treat an injury.
"I want to say that I have never intentionally used any banned substances. It is a huge and horrible mistake," she told reporters after testifying at the hearing.
"I hope they believe me. I have always been open. I have spoken only the truth," she said.
She has said she took a drug prescribed by her private doctor for an injury. She now faces a career-threatening maximum two year ban and will also be questioned by Italian magistrates.
Use of banned substances is a criminal offence in Italy.
Pyleva, who won the 15-km individual biathlon silver medal, was stunned to hear she was being called in for questioning.
"What? There is a case against me?," Pyleva, visibly shocked asked reporters, adding this was going to be her last Games and did not want to end her career this way.
Asked whether she thought she would be convicted, Pyleva said: "I hope not. I really hope it won't happen."
Pyleva was stripped of her accreditation and was forced out of the Olympic village. She said she would remain in Italy for the time being and did not yet know when she would leave.
Her private doctor, Nina Vinogradova, blamed the Russian pharmaceutical company saying she had prescribed the right medicine which was approved by the drug's manufacturer.
"It's a new medicine but it had all the necessary certificates," Vinogradova told a news conference in the Siberian city of Krasnoyarsk.
But Russia's biathlon chief shifted the blame on the doctor.
"She (Pyleva) never told us that she took some medicine which was prescribed by her private doctor," Alexander Tikhonov said in televised comments. "The doctor just made a mistake in prescribing the wrong medicine."
A gold medallist in the 10-km pursuit at the 2002 Salt Lake City Games, Pyleva tested positive for carphedon, a prohibited stimulant, on Feb. 13 after the women's 15-km individual biathlon.
Russian media on Friday pointed a finger at Leonid Tyagachyov, president of the Russian Olympic Committee.
The Sovietsky Sport newspaper said Tyagachyov had publicly promised no repeat of a huge doping scandal that rocked Russia at the Salt Lake City Olympics four years ago.
"Yesterday's Olga Pyleva drama proved that Russian sports officials are simply not capable of learning lessons from previous doping scandals. And from their mistakes as well," it said.
В Италии использование допинга приравнивается к преступлению....на Пылёву насколько я понимаю даже завели уголовное дело. Я в шоке....