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Russian Olympic Committee Responds To Murphy’s Anti-Doping Thoughts

2020 TOKYO SUMMER OLYMPIC GAMES

The Russian Olympic Committee (ROC) has offered a response after American swimmer Ryan Murphy said that he was “swimming in a race that’s probably not clean” after the men’s 200 backstroke final at the 2020 Olympic Games in Tokyo.

“How unnerving our victories are for some of our colleagues,” the statement reads (translated from original Russian. “Yes, we are here at the Olympics. Whether someone likes it or not. The old barrel organ started the song about Russian doping again.

“English-language propaganda, oozing with verbal sweat in the Tokyo heat. Through the mouths of athletes offended by defeats. We will not console you. Forgive us those who are weaker. God is their judge. And for us, an assistant.”

Murphy, the 2016 Olympic champion in the men’s 100 and 200 back, lost both of his titles this week, winning bronze and silver, respectively, with Russian Evgeny Rylov landing on top of the podium in both races.

Another Russian swimmer, Kliment Kolesnikov, was the silver medalist in the 100 back.

After the 200 back, Murphy was asked about anti-doping, and had an explosive response, describing how frustrating it was knowing he was likely going against a field that was not 100 percent clean.

Murphy and Rylov have since cleared the air on the comments made, as Murphy was simply responding to a anti-doping question in general, and never mentioned Rylov or the ROC.

“We have exchanged messages along our Instagram accounts, clarifying everything personally to each other and agreed that it was a misunderstanding and that his words were misinterpreted,” Rylov said.

“He was asked what he thought in general about possible doping abuse in the sport of swimming. He replied that in his opinion not all athletes in this sport are clean. He has the right to express his personal opinion and most likely it is a problem somewhere.”

Murphy’s comment was referencing the decision by the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) in December 2020 that reduced Russia’s four-year ban from competing internationally down to two—a ban imposed by the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) after it was revealed that the country had been running a state-sponsored doping program.

Full Murphy quote:

“I’ve got about 15 thoughts. Thirteen of them would get me into a lot of trouble. It is what it is. I try not to get caught up in that. It is a huge mental drain on me to go throughout the year that I’m swimming in a race that’s probably not clean, and that is what it is. The people that know a lot more about the situation made the decision they did. It frustrates me but I have to swim the field that’s next to me. I don’t have the bandwidth to train for the Olympics at a very high level and try to lobby the people who are making the decisions that they’re making the wrong decisions.”

The ban is the reason why Russia’s athletes are competing under the Russian Olympic Committee (ROC) banner at the Games, and aren’t able to fly their flag or listen to their national anthem during Olympic medal ceremonies.

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Swim mom
3 years ago

Pretty sure Ryan has a TUE so he can legitimately take steroids for his asthma… so who’s doping?

Chad
3 years ago

See Rylov’s latest IG post. Him and Murphy clarified with each other that it was just a misunderstanding and it was in no way directed personally. This was nothing more than a quote taken out of context that was blown up by the media. As much as the heard of commenters on this forum wants to find a villain, there is none to be found in this scenario (besides the media maybe). Time to move on.

DEVO
3 years ago

That was some world-class snark from the rule-dodging Russians. I’m not sure if we should be offended or impressed!

Shane Potsdam
3 years ago

I went from rooting for Ryan to thinking of him as a sad sore loser. Typical Lily King-esque!

Honest Observer
3 years ago

The funny thing about all this is that Murphy has a body that looks like it’s been on steroids (I’m not accusing him of having taken them), and Kolesnikov and Rylov have surprisingly wimpy-looking bodies (I’m not accusing them of being wimps). Makes the whole affair seem a little anomalous somehow.

DEVO
Reply to  Honest Observer
3 years ago

PEDS =/= steroids

Gogo bibi
3 years ago

Correct me if I’m wrong but I think Rylov is training with energy standard international athlete and not in Russia. There is no way he will be involved in a doping scandal

Right Dude Here
3 years ago

It’s a real case of “You’re right, but you’re out of line.”

Of course we know he’s probably right. I don’t like the implication that Rylov was doping, but he didn’t outright say it.

Eric the eel > Phelps
3 years ago

right when I saw yesterday that the USADA doesn’t strictly follow the international antidoping rules

About James Sutherland

James Sutherland

James swam five years at Laurentian University in Sudbury, Ontario, specializing in the 200 free, back and IM. He finished up his collegiate swimming career in 2018, graduating with a bachelor's degree in economics. In 2019 he completed his graduate degree in sports journalism. Prior to going to Laurentian, James swam …

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