Troubled Milan-Cortina Games at risk of anti-doping tests moving abroad
ROME: Organisers of the 2026 Winter Olympics are unsure if doping tests can be carried out in Italy as the country’s only WADA-accredited testing site is not ready for the Milan-Cortina event with just over two years until it starts.
Rome’s FMSI laboratory is nestled between rugby and hockey fields and fencing halls at an Italian Olympic Committee training centre to the north of the centre of the Eternal City, and is in the crosshairs of the world’s anti-doping authority.
“We’re in a race against time, and we don’t have any more to lose,” says the laboratory’s director Francesco Botre. “WADA carried out an inspection in 2017 and had nothing to say about the quality of our work. But they told us that our lab is too small and in too close proximity to the athletes.
“They told us we had two years to expand the facility, but in meantime the 2026 Winter Games were assigned to Milan-Cortina. There was no way the proposed expansion could have handled the increase in testing for the Olympics so WADA gave us more time.”
This increase, or 150 samples per day during the Olympic and Paralympic Games (to be held respectively between February 6-22 and March 6-15), would take the number of annual analyses carried out from the current 12,000 to 20,000.
That “Olympic overload” would be an impossible task for the current team of 25 in the 400 square-metre lab, which is significantly smaller than the 3000m2 available in the facility being used for next year’s summer Olympics in Paris.
In stasis for two years due to the coronavirus pandemic, the expansion project didn’t really get going until this year, with a building identified which is “isolated and self-sufficient as WADA requires”.
But they need 11 million euros of funding for planning, the purchase of new analysis equipment and the actual move, a sum which will increase to around 20 million euros once operational costs during the Games are taken into account.
The Milan-Cortina organisation committee has referred all questions to Italy’s Sport Ministry, which did not respond to AFP’s requests for comment despite the clear state of urgency. In order to be fully operational one year before the start of the Winter Games as required by WADA, Botre and his team will need to have relocated no later than July next year.
“Afterwards there will be all the work of calibrating the equipment so that they can identify 400 different substances,” says Botre.
If the Rome facility is not ready on time, testing will have to be carried out abroad, in Paris or Cologne. That would be a new blow for organisers who due to a lack of time, money and political will are likely to send the Games’ sliding events north of the Alps. “WADA’s opinion is that the laboratory facility is not currently in a position to deal with the increased activity associated with hosting the Olympic and Paralympic Games”.
-
Rachel McAdams Becomes Object Of Jokes At Hollywood Star Of Fame Event -
South Korea's Ex-PM Han Duck-soo Jailed For 23 Years Over Martial Law Crises -
Global Markets On Edge Over Greenland Dispute: Is US Economic Leadership At Risk? -
King, Queen Visit Deadly Train Crash Site -
Oxford Research Warns ChatGPT Reflects Western Worldviews -
UK Inflation Unexpectedly Rises To 3.4% In December, The First Increase In Five Months -
Meghan Markle Set To Take Big Decision On Returning To UK For Invictus Games -
Prince Harry To Leave Britain One Day Earlier Than Expected For THIS Reason -
The Way You Consume Sugar Could Be Affecting Your Health -
Brooklyn Beckham Gets Backing From Vanessa Marcil Amid Feud With Parents -
OpenAI Uses AI To Detect Under 18 Users On ChatGPT -
Philippines To Lift Ban On Grok AI After Musk's Platform Commits To Fix Safety Concerns -
Trump Vows ‘no Going Back’ On Greenland Ahead Of Davos Visit -
Alexander Skarsgard Breaks Silence On Rumors He Is Bisexual -
King Charles Faces Rift With Prince William Over Prince Harry’s Invictus Games -
Elon Musk’s Critique On ChatGPT Safety Draws Sharp Response From Sam Altman