
Global Doping Authority Drops Cases Against U.S. Officials
The World Anti-Doping Agency has dropped a defamation lawsuit against its American counterpart, a major retreat for the agency after nearly a year of escalating conflict over its handling of positive tests for a banned drug by 23 elite Chinese swimmers.
The decision by the agency — known by its acronym, WADA — to drop the suit it had filed in a Swiss court came months after it angrily reacted to comments from Travis T. Tygart, the leader of the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency. Mr. Tygart accused WADA of covering up the tests after The New York Times revealed details of how swimmers in China were found to have had a banned heart drug in their systems at a competition just months before the Tokyo Olympics.
That revelation led to anger and recrimination among athletes and antidoping regulators around the world, including a deep rupture in an already strained relationship between WADA and the United States. The United States had contributed more than any other country to WADA's budget, but withdrew its funding over doubts that WADA's leadership was up to the task of keeping sports clean.
On top of walking away from the defamation suit, WADA also retreated on another matter: It dropped an ethics case against Dr. Rahul Gupta, who represented the United States on WADA's executive board during the Biden administration.
A WADA official had claimed that Dr. Gupta, who had been the drug czar in the Biden White House, had failed to disclose to the agency what he knew about a Justice Department investigation into how the tests of the Chinese swimmers were handled. Dr. Gupta has said he knew nothing about the investigation, which is being run by the U.S. attorney's office in Boston.
'The dismissal of the unauthorized and baseless lawsuit against USADA and the ethics complaint against the White House is complete vindication for us both,' the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency said in a statement.
'WADA's actions were nothing more than retaliatory, wasteful and abusive attempts to suppress the truth and the voice of those seeking answers to why WADA allowed China to blatantly disregard the rules for 23 elite swimmers who tested positive,' the statement said.
In a statement, WADA attacked Mr. Tygart, insisted that it had done nothing wrong in how it handled the positive tests and did not provide specifics for why it was walking away from the suit.
'In the interest of moving on and focusing our efforts on strengthening the global antidoping system that the community has worked hard to build together over 25 years, WADA has made the decision to withdraw the lawsuit against Mr. Tygart and USADA,' the World Anti-Doping Agency said. 'The lawsuit was only ever about protecting WADA's reputation (indeed, no financial compensation was sought).'
WADA had opened its ethics investigation into Dr. Gupta in July after receiving an anonymous complaint against him, which U.S. officials believe was filed by a senior WADA official. Mette Hartlev, chairman of the agency's independent ethics board, wrote Dr. Gupta on Jan. 30 to tell him the matter had been closed, according to a document reviewed by The Times.
The World Anti-Doping Agency's Swiss lawyers wrote to lawyers representing Mr. Tygart and the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency a week later to say the defamation case had been dropped. The WADA lawyers wrote that the turnabout was because WADA's 'sole goal' of protecting its reputation had 'been achieved through non-procedural means,' without providing details.
WADA's secretary general, Olivier Niggli confirmed that the agency had dropped the lawsuit in a letter to members of its executive board. The letter was first reported by Honest Sport, an online publication focusing on sports integrity.
'While we remain convinced that the lawsuit would be successful on its merits, we have determined that it is futile to argue with somebody who is unwilling to accept clear evidence, whose only goal is to damage WADA and the global antidoping system,' the letter said.
Dr. Gupta had a different interpretation.
WADA's decision to drop its claims, he said in emailed comments to The Times, 'clearly demonstrate the meritless and politically motivated claims that WADA leaders attempted to pursue against the United States.'
Some of the Chinese swimmers who had tested positive went on to win medals, including golds, at the Tokyo Olympics. After the revelation about the earlier positive tests and WADA's decision not to impose any sanctions on the swimmers, Congress sought testimony from antidoping officials. A Justice Department investigation has for months rattled sports and antidoping officials around the world.
The United States, through Dr. Gupta, had been asking WADA to undertake an independent audit of its operations in light of the Chinese cases. WADA has resisted and, according to Dr. Gupta, retaliated against the United States.
'These actions are not only damaging to the integrity of global antidoping efforts but demonstrate a clear example of why reform of WADA is urgently needed,' he said.
The tension ratcheted up before a meeting of the WADA board in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, in December. Dr. Gupta had demanded before the meeting that the agency submit to the audit and also drop the defamation lawsuit against American antidoping authorities, who have repeatedly accused WADA of covering up the failed Chinese tests, if it wanted to keep receiving United States funding.
WADA countered by saying there would be consequences — including harm to U.S. efforts to stage international sporting events — should it not make the payments. The Americans have continued to withhold the funds. The next Summer Olympics are set to be held in Los Angeles in 2028, two years after the United States hosts the majority of the 2026 soccer World Cup.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Fox Sports
13 minutes ago
- Fox Sports
O Canada: Finals matchup between Olympic teammates Gilgeous-Alexander and Nembhard getting attention
Associated Press OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — The NBA Finals. East vs. West. Indiana vs. Oklahoma City. Canada vs. ... Canada? It sure seemed like it at times in Game 1 of the series, anyway — and odds are, there will be more of those moments throughout the rest of this matchup between the Pacers and Thunder. There are four Canadians in the series, and two of them — NBA MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander for the Thunder and Andrew Nembhard for the Pacers — went head-to-head plenty in Game 1. Gilgeous-Alexander scored 38 points; Nembhard scored eight of his 14 in the fourth and was on the floor for the entirety of Indiana's 32-16 run that ended the game and turned a 15-point deficit into a one-point win. 'He's a competitor. He's a winner,' Gilgeous-Alexander said. 'Plays the game the right way on both ends of the floor. Really good player. Yeah, he's a winner for sure. No doubt.' They have been playing alongside each other since they were kids and were teammates on Canada's national team at the Paris Olympics in 2024. And they saw plenty of each other on both ends of the floor in Game 1, plus weren't afraid to mix it up with a little extra push here or choice words there. Nothing over the line, but enough to remind the other that it's all business right now. 'Nothing more than two guys wanting to win,' Gilgeous-Alexander said. 'No malicious intent behind it, just wanting to win.' Oklahoma City's Lu Dort and Indiana's Bennedict Mathurin are the other two Canadians in the finals. The four Canadian players combined for 72 points in Game 1; that's the most ever in any finals game by players from any individual country other than the U.S. That smashed the previous mark for points from Canadians in a finals game; it was 34, all from Jamal Murray, for Denver in Game 3 against Miami in 2023. 'It's amazing for our country,' Nembhard said. It's not just Gilgeous-Alexander who has long-time familiarity with Nembhard. Thunder forward Chet Holmgren played with Nembhard at Gonzaga as well. 'Obviously, he's my guy, great dude,' Holmgren said. 'I have a lot of compliments for him as a basketball player and a person. But we're playing against him right now, so I'm going to hold on to all those.' Pacers coach Rick Carlisle knows the Gilgeous-Alexander vs. Nembhard matchup might be viewed by some as a game within the game. He said Nembhard 'loves the challenge' of matching wits with Gilgeous-Alexander. 'I mean, you don't stop players today,' Carlisle said. 'You try to make it hard. He played with Shai on the Olympic team and so they have familiarity. They are both from Canada and they both have played a lot with and against each other over the years. But this is the ultimate challenge, a guy like him who is the MVP.' ___ AP NBA: recommended


USA Today
13 minutes ago
- USA Today
Ravens DC Zach Orr offers A1 critique of their new safety tandem
Ravens DC Zach Orr offers A1 critique of their new safety tandem Zach Orr sees something special brewing in the Ravens starting safety tandem. Pay close attention to the backend of the Baltimore Ravens' defense as mandatory minicamp and training camp ensue. How's that for stating the obvious, right? Several OTA practices have already given us so much to talk about. Rashod Bateman is set to enter another tax bracket after signing an extension. Ar'Darius Washington is in a contract season, but he is unfortunately injured. That has seemingly opened the door for the nearly-forgotten Jalyn Armour-Davis, who has since gotten some snaps and worked at the safety position. For the Ravens to take another step in the right direction and get back to the AFC Championship Game, the backend of their defense will need to take a few steps of their own. We know there isn't much to worry about with Marlon Humphrey and Kyle Hamilton. The latter has missed a few OTA sessions, but there's a lot of optimism in the tandem he will form with a newly-acquired and highly-touted rookie. Ravens defensive coordinator Zach Orr has a ton of faith in his starting safety duo. The first three seasons of Kyle Hamilton's career were good enough to inspire the potential envy of NFL stars who are five years his senior. He earned a spot on the Pro Football Writers Association's All-Rookie Team in 2022. He has only gotten better since then. A member of the past two Pro Bowl rosters, he earned a First-Team All-Pro nod in 2023 before being named a Second-Teamer in 2024. One star alone, however, does not an elite safety tandem make, so Baltimore found an answer and an upgrade during the first round of this past April's draft in Malaki Starks. Saying defense coordinator Zach Orr is excited would be a massive understatement. This past week, he expressed his expectation for Hamilton and Starks as a duo. The NFL is a long way from college football in terms of level of competition, but Starks looks like a sure thing. Baltimore is hoping his skill set translates to the highest level of football. During his time in Athens with the Georgia Bulldogs, he was named a Freshman All-American and became a College Football Playoff National Champion. He was a Consensus All-American in 2023, a First-team All-American in 2024, and has two First-Team All-SEC (2023, 2024) to show for his trouble. He's used to playing in big games. He's certain to play in several this season, and fortunately for him, though the pressure to perform will come quickly, he doesn't have to do everything on his own.
Yahoo
18 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Survey: Russians now see Germany, not US, as most hostile country
Germany is now considered the most hostile country towards Russia, a survey conducted by the independent Moscow-based polling institute Levada showed. The survey found that 55% of respondents named Germany as the most unfriendly state - a 40 percentage point increase since May 2020. In contrast, the United States, which held the top position for two decades, was named by only 40% of respondents, compared to 76% last year. This shift is attributed to the revival of Russian-American relations under US President Donald Trump, the institute said. Germany, however, has faced increasing criticism from the Russian leadership, particularly due to its arms deliveries to Ukraine, which has been under attack by Russia. The tone has notably hardened since Chancellor Friedrich Merz took office last month. The United Kingdom ranked second among countries perceived as hostile to Russia, with 49% of respondents, followed by Ukraine at 43%. Best Friends: Belarus and China The representative survey also asked Russians to name the five countries they associate as having the closest and friendliest relations with Russia. Belarus topped the list with 80% of respondents, followed by China with two-thirds. Kazakhstan ranked third with 36%, followed by India with 32% and North Korea at 30%. The results reflect the Kremlin's official policy of dividing the world into friendly and unfriendly states since the start of Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine. Germany, which was long one of the main buyers of Russian gas in the European Union, has faced criticism in Moscow for its military support for Ukraine. The representative survey was conducted between May 22 and May 28, with 1,613 people aged 18 and older participating, Levada said.