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Wednesday November 27, 2024

Russia ice hockey squad replaced amid meldonium fears

By our correspondents
April 10, 2016

MOSCOW: Russia have replaced their men’s under-18 ice hockey squad with the under-17s for this month’s world championships amid concerns the players could test positive for meldonium, the Russian Ice Hockey Federation (RIHF) said on Friday.

The RIHF announced in a statement that players at the national training camp took meldonium under an official programme, but stopped in the autumn when it was announced the drug would be placed on the World Anti-Doping Agency’s (WADA) banned list from January 1, 2016.

“The Russian Ice Hockey Federation has made the decision, in conjunction with the Sports Ministry to change the roster of the under-18 side in order to protect their rights,” the Russian ice hockey governing body said.

The United States will host the world championships from April 14 to 24 in Grand Forks, North Dakota.

“As prescribed by the doctors, players of the Viktor Tikhonov center used the Mildronate drug (meldonium) so as to protect the heart muscle in periods of high exertion,” the RIHF statement added.

Supplies of the drug were carried out officially in accordance with the Federal Medical-Biology agency.

After Mildronate was included in the banned drugs category by the (World) Anti-Doping agency in autumn of 2015, the players stopped using this drug.

The RIHF said more work was needed to determine how long meldonium — which helps boost blood flow and increases the amount of oxygen taken in by the body, allowing athletes to recover faster while training — can remain in a person’s system.

“It is impossible to know the degree of guilt from a sportsman without knowing accurately how quickly the substance can be removed from one’s body, while additional tests need to be carried out to learn about the effects the drug has on one’s body,” the RIHF statement said.

Meldonium, marketed as Mildronate and a common medicine across eastern Europe, was developed to treat heart conditions such as angina.

It was also used extensively for three decades to toughen up Soviet troops in action at high altitude.

Russian Sports Minister Vitaly Mutko was quoted by the Interfax news agency on Thursday saying several hundred Russian sportspeople used to take meldonium before it was banned, and Russian anti-doping services know who can be tested for it. Up to 30 percent of all Russian sports teams had used meldonium in the past, Mutko said