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Athletics doping scandal 2015
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Russia rules out Olympics boycott as they ‘admit some things’ in doping scandal are true

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An athlete attends a training session at the ‘Yunost‘ sports ground at the Black Sea resort of Sochi on Thursday. Photo: AP
Associated Press

With an Olympic boycott ruled out, Russia is planning to at least partially admit it has a doping problem.

Russian sports minister Vitaly Mutko said that there will “not in any case” be a boycott of next year's Olympics in Rio de Janeiro.

Later the acting president of the Russian track federation said he is ready to own up to some of the charges leveled in the World Anti-Doping Agency commission's massive report on doping in the country.

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“We admit some things, we argue with some things, some are already fixed, it's a variety,” said Vadim Zelichenok, declining to provide further details. “It's not for the press.”
People stand at Olympic rings installed at a pier of the port of the Black Sea resort of Sochi at sunset, on Thursday. Photo: AP
People stand at Olympic rings installed at a pier of the port of the Black Sea resort of Sochi at sunset, on Thursday. Photo: AP
Russia is against a boycott. Russia is against political interference in sport
Vitaly Mutko

The governing body of track and field is expected to rule Friday on whether to suspend Russia from competition because of the doping scandal. If Russia is banned, the country's track and field team could be excluded from next year's Olympics.

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