Sport braced for damning revelations from anti-doping agency

Reuters, 09/11 00:35 CET

By Mitch Phillips

LONDON (Reuters) – A report by the World Anti-Doping Agency on Monday is set to deepen an athletics scandal that, according to one of the document’s authors, eclipses even the alleged corruption at football’s governing body FIFA.

According to leaks to a French investigative news organisation, Mediapart, the WADA report will say that athletics officials tried to extort money from leading athletes, including a Turkish Olympic champion, in return for concealing the fact that they had failed drugs tests.

One of the co-authors of the report, Richard McLaren, a Canadian law professor and sports lawyer, told the Sunday Times: “This is a whole different scale of corruption than the FIFA scandal. This report is going to be a real game-changer.

“Here you potentially have a bunch of old men who put a whole lot of extra money in their pockets — through extortion and bribes — but also caused significant changes to actual results and final standings of international athletics competitions.”

FIFA has been thrown into turmoil by the U.S. indictments of 14 football officials and sports marketing executives for alleged corruption, and its president Sepp Blatter is suspended and facing criminal investigation in Switzerland.

The former head of the International Association of Athletics Federations, Lamine Diack of Senegal, was last week placed under formal judicial investigation in France on suspicion of corruption, along with two other former IAAF officials.

His successor, Briton Sebastian Coe, told Reuters on Sunday: “My job is very simple now and there is no ambiguity about it. It is to rebuild trust in our sport.”

He said it would be “a long road to redemption”.

RUSSIAN CONNECTION

The WADA report, according to the leaked French account, is expected to implicate relations of Diack. One of his sons has left his marketing role within the IAAF while under investigation for corrupt practices. The family has dismissed what they described as excessive and insignificant accusations.

The report is also expected to single out former Russian athletics federation head Valentin Balakhnichev.

On Saturday Balakhnichev rejected allegations that his federation worked with top IAAF officials to try to blackmail athletes in the run-up to the 2012 London Olympics.

“Let them present their claims to me, I will fight them,” Russian news agencies quoted him as saying.

Among athletes allegedly targeted for extortion was Russian marathon runner Liliya Shobukhova, who featured in a German documentary in December 2014 that alleged systematic doping by Russian athletes.

Shobukhova was banned for doping and was stripped of marathon victories in London and Chicago. But two months ago, WADA cut her ban, saying she had provided it with important information to expose wrongdoing by others.

Turkey’s Asli Cakir Alptekin, the 1,500 metres Olympic champion in 2012, was also approached by IAAF officials demanding payment of $500,000, according to the leaks.

She was give a second doping ban last summer and stripped of her Olympic medal.

On Sunday IAAF chief Coe said neither he nor anyone else at the IAAF had seen the report, but he was shocked and saddened by the accusations against his predecessor Diack.

“I will await the WADA report but I think the focus of those allegations was about the ability of people to be in a position to manipulate systems and that is what we will look at very carefully,” Coe told Reuters after announcing he had accelerated a planned internal reform process.

“If that is found to be the case, then clearly we need to have systems in place that are not just about secure systems but people inside those systems being secure and proper people.”

WADA will release its report at 1400 GMT on Monday and hold a news conference immediately afterwards in Geneva.

Source: Sport braced for damning revelations from anti-doping agency – Latest sport news

CANUCKS BANTER: Canucks Take On New Jersey Today After Loss To Buffalo

CANUCKS BANTER     By Andrew Chernoff    November 8, 2015

Last Minute Goal Spoils Miller’s Return To Buffalo As Canucks Lose 3-2

The Vancouver Canucks began a tough 7-game road trip after a disappointing 3-2 home loss to Pittsburgh at home, only to lose to the Buffalo Sabres 3-2 on Saturday afternoon in the final minute of regulation play;  the first time this season the Canucks have lost back-to-back games in regulation.

The Canucks are now 1-5 in their last 6-meetings in Buffalo and in their last 18-home games against the Canucks, the Sabres are 14-3-1.

Henrik Sedin with his 3rd goal and Chris Higgins with his 1rst goal of the season scored for the Canucks while Daniel Sedin, with his team leading 7th-assist and rookie Ben Hutton with his 6th-assist also contributed to the score sheet.

Vancouver allowed their first shorthanded goal on the road for the first time this season against Buffalo.

Interesting note: Hutton has 6-assists in 14-games as a rookie. The rookie assists record for a Canucks defenseman is 42-assists set by Dale Tallon in 1970-71.

The 6-4-4 Canucks are in New Jersey to take on ex-Canucks goalie Corey Schneider and the Devils. There is a possibility that the backup goalies for both teams may be in net for each team, as both Richard Bachman for the Canucks and Keith Kincaid for the Devils need playing time.

can10

The Canucks are currently in 2nd-place with 16-point with Los Angeles at the top of the Pacific Division of the Western Conference, with 18-points. San Jose,  are alone in 3rd-place with 14-points. Vancouver, San Jose, Los Angeles, Anaheim and Edmonton all have a game in-hand on Calgary. Arizona has a game in-hand on Vancouver, San Jose, Los Angeles, Edmonton and Anaheim; two games in-hand on Calgary.

image

Vancouver is among the top 7-teams in the Western Conference, and have 5th most points in the conference with 16-points. The Dallas Stars are at the  top of the conference with 22-points, with St. Louis nipping at their skate blades with 21-points, both teams currently sporting 2-game winning streaks.

image

Canucks are among the top 14-teams in the NHL, and are tied for the 7th best team in the league with their 16-points. The Montreal Canadians are the top team with 27-points, on 13-wins, 2-losses, and 1-OT; all wins in regulation play. The Dallas Stars and New York Rangers are near with 22-points each.

image

New Jersey is in 5th-place with 15-points, 7-points behind the New York Rangers who lead the Atlantic Division of the Eastern Conference, with 22-points. Washington and the Pittsburgh Penguins closely follow with 20 and 18-points respectively. The New York Islanders currently occupy 4rth place with 15-points. The Flyers, Panthers, Islanders, Penguins, and Rangers, all have a game in-hand on the Blue Jackets; Washington and New Jersey have two games in-hand on Blue Jackets.

image

Daniel Sedin leads the Canucks in scoring with 11-points including a team high 7-assists, followed by Henrik Sedin with 9-points; Alex Burrows with 8-points; Brandon Sutter with 7-points. Radim Vrbata, Jannik Hansen, rookies Ben Hutton and Jared McCann, are next with 6-points each. Brandon Prust, and Alex Edler have 5-points each.

Rookie Jared McCann leads the Canucks as the top sniper with 5-goals in 12-games played.

can12

For the Devils, Mike Cammalleri leads Philadelphia with 12-points and a team high 8-assists; followed by Lee Stempniak, Travis Zajac and Kyle Palmieri with 10-points each. Adam Henrique has 9-points.

Zajac and Henrique are the top goal scorers for New Jersey with 6-goals each.

can13

GAME JOTTINGS

can14

can14

Statistics for Canucks Banter provided with thanks by the NHL, Vancouver Canucks and SportingCharts.

Medicine the only winner in warfare | Scoop News

“There is only one winner in warfare, and that is medicine,” Dr Rhys Thomas, a specialist anaesthetist and former Lieutenant Colonel in the British Forces, has told an anaesthetists conference being held in Wellington, November 5-7.

His presentation focused on the profound changes that lessons in Afghanistan have brought to resuscitation techniques now being used for civilians in the UK and elsewhere. Dr Thomas was speaking to the New Zealand Annual Scientific Meeting of the Australian and New Zealand College of Anaesthetists (ANZCA). Resuscitation and the management of blood loss in trauma cases are typically the role of anaesthetists.

“In Afghanistan, the high number of casualties led to us looking into what was happening to the physiology of those with severe trauma. Once we understood that, resuscitation techniques changed and we used blood and blood products along with injections of transexamic acid to stop bleeding.

“And rather than waiting for the patient to be brought to a hospital, we flew a consultant with those products to the patient in the war zone to provide this advanced resuscitation.

“This resulted in a dramatic improvement in the number of patients who could be brought back alive to a hospital where advanced work saw the overall mortality rate fall further. Between 2006 and the end of 2009, the use of massive transfusion techniques saw mortality drop to seven per cent compared with an expected mortality rate of 60 per cent for trauma cases back in the UK.”

“The hospital developed a Formula One-type of rapid blood resuscitation node with surgeons desperately trying to stem the source of bleeding while anaesthetists and nurses rapidly replaced the patient’s blood.

“However, our focus was not just on survival but on getting much better outcomes overall – getting patients well enough to be able to return to work. For instance, we could have double amputees back walking within six weeks.”

Achieving that requires each link in the chain to be as good as the other, so another change was adopting crew resource management (CRM) techniques learned from the aviation industry. These focus on managing large teams more effectively by improving communication and leadership in stressful situations.

Dr Thomas said the success of these techniques has seen them applied in the UK’s new trauma networks. He is the national clinical director of the emergency medical retrieval and transfer service in Wales, which replicates what was being done in Afghanistan.

“The helicopter and teams are smaller but the capability is the same. The service is based on the principle that enhanced care teams should be available 24/7 to provide care to the major trauma patient.

“Next year, this service will become available 24/7 (currently it is 12 hours a day) and any trauma case in Wales will be able to be reached by road or helicopter within 20 minutes, with medical staff equipped to provide that vital initial effective resuscitation.”

Patients are then transferred to hospitals staffed by trauma experts. As well as road and other accidents, the service handles medical cases, neonatal, paediatric, and critical care transfer and retrieval.

Source: Medicine the only winner in warfare | Scoop News

Obama quashes Keystone XL in bid to boost climate leverage

WASHINGTON — Ending a seven-year political saga, President Barack Obama killed the proposed Keystone XL pipeline on Friday, declaring it would have undercut U.S. efforts to clinch a global climate change deal at the center of his environmental legacy.

Obama’s decision marked an unambiguous victory for environmental activists who spent years denouncing the pipeline, lobbying the administration and even chaining themselves to tractors to make their point about the threat posed by dirty fossil fuels. It also places the president and fellow Democrats in direct confrontation with Republicans and energy advocates heading into the 2016 presidential election.

The president, announcing his decision at the White House, said he agreed with a State Department conclusion that Keystone wouldn’t advance U.S. national interests. He lamented that both political parties had “overinflated” Keystone into a proxy battle for climate change but glossed over his own role in allowing the controversy to drag out over several national elections.

“This pipeline would neither be a silver bullet for the economy, as was promised by some, nor the express lane to climate disaster proclaimed by others,” he said.

Although Obama in 2013 said his litmus test for Keystone would be whether it increased U.S. greenhouse gas emissions, his final decision appeared based on other factors. He didn’t broach that topic in his remarks, and State Department officials said they’d determined Keystone wouldn’t significantly affect carbon pollution levels.

Instead, the administration cited the “broad perception” that Keystone would carry “dirty” oil, and suggested approval would raise questions abroad about whether the U.S. was serious about climate change.

“Frankly, approving this project would have undercut that global leadership,” the president said.

Obama will travel to Paris at the end of the month for talks on a global climate agreement, which the president hopes will be the crowning jewel for his environmental legacy. Killing the pipeline allows Obama to claim aggressive action, strengthening his hand as world leaders gather in France.

Though environmental groups hailed Friday as a “day of celebration,” Obama’s decision was unlikely to be the last word for Keystone XL.

TransCanada, the company behind the proposal, said it remained “absolutely committed” to building the project and was considering filing a new application for permits. The company has previously raised the possibility of suing the U.S. to recoup the more than $2 billion it says it has already spent on development.

“Today, misplaced symbolism was chosen over merit and science. Rhetoric won out over reason,” said TransCanada CEO Russ Girling. His criticism was echoed by Republicans including House Speaker Paul Ryan, who said Obama had rejected tens of thousands of jobs while railroading Congress.

“This decision isn’t surprising, but it is sickening,” Ryan said.

On the other side, climate activists noted the widespread assumption early in Obama’s presidency that he’d eventually approve Keystone, and said his apparent about-face proved how effective a no-holds-barred advocacy campaign could be.

“Now every fossil fuel project around the world is under siege,” said Bill McKibben of the environmental group 350.org.

Already, the issue has spilled over into the presidential race. The Republican field is unanimous in support of Keystone, while the Democratic candidates are all opposed — including Hillary Rodham Clinton, who oversaw the early part of the federal review as Obama’s first-term secretary of state.

TransCanada first applied for Keystone permits 2,604 days ago in September 2008 — shortly before Obama was elected. As envisioned, Keystone would snake from Canada’s tar sands through Montana, South Dakota and Nebraska, then connect with existing pipelines to carry more than 800,000 barrels of crude oil a day to specialized refineries along the Texas Gulf Coast.

But Democrats and environmental groups latched onto Keystone as just the type of project that must be phased out if the world is to seriously combat climate change. Meanwhile, Republicans, Canadian politicians and the energy industry argued the pipeline would create thousands of jobs and inject billions into the economy. They accused Obama of hypocrisy for complaining about a lack of U.S. infrastructure investment while obstructing an $8 billion project.

Source: Obama quashes Keystone XL in bid to boost climate leverage – Your Houston News: News: barack obama, keystone xl, environment,

Army seeks to hide truth with threat to deport foreigners in lumad fact-finding mission – Karapatan

The Army’s threat to seek the deportation of foreigners who joined a recent fact-finding mission on atrocities against lumad in Surigao del Sur is part of military efforts to divert attention from its complicity in the continuing human rights violations committed against indigenous people.

Source: Army seeks to hide truth with threat to deport foreigners in lumad fact-finding mission – Karapatan