From Inside the Games

Men’s pole vault world record holder Renaud Lavillenie has claimed that Russia being banned from athletics competition at the Rio 2016 Olympic Games could be a good thing to help the sport resolve its “doping mess”, but admits he has sympathy for clean athletes in the country.

Russia are at risk of missing the Olympics in August after a ban handed out by the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) last November.

It came after the country was declared non-compliant by the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) following allegations of systemic and state-supported doping in the Russian athletics team published by a WADA Independent Commission.

The All-Russia Athletics Federation was also suspended by the IAAF, with a taskforce put in place to oversee their potential return.

Two independent experts have been provided to the Russian Anti-Doping Agency from WADA – one from Australia and one from Lithuania – to further help the country, with Russia hopeful the suspension will be lifted by the IAAF at their council meeting on 17 June.

Last week Russian Sports Minister Vitaly Mutko claimed that punishments should be more focused around dealing with “bad” athletes rather than clean ones.

French pole vault star Lavillenie, who broke the men’s world record with 6.16 metres effort in 2014, expressed his view that the ban remaining in place could send a strong anti-doping message around the sport.

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