Recommendations

Where is Dr Grigory Rodchenkov now?

Where is Dr Grigory Rodchenkov now?

Rodchenkov has since been living under witness protection. The Rodchenkov Affair charts Rochchenkov’s childhood growing up under the Iron Curtain, his early experiences of doping as a young athlete in Moscow and his later career working as head of Russia’s national anti-doping laboratory.

How did Russians cheat in Sochi?

The key to it was a technique the Russian security service, the FSB, had developed to open supposedly tamper-proof bottles with thin pieces of metal. It was cheating on an Olympic scale, and the hosts, to Putin’s delight, topped the medal table with 33 medals.

How did Russia switch urine samples?

According to a May 2016 report in The New York Times, whistleblower Grigory Rodchenkov said that doping experts collaborated with Russia’s intelligence service on a state-sponsored doping programme in which urine samples were switched through a “mouse hole” in the laboratory’s wall.

How did Russia swap urine samples in Sochi?

Report: Russia Used ‘Mouse Hole’ To Swap Urine Samples Of Olympic Athletes : The Torch At the 2014 Winter Games in Sochi, the Russians traded dirty urine samples for clean ones by passing them through a hole drilled into the wall of the anti-doping lab, according to an official report.

How did the FSB open the bottles?

The only way to open the bottle, according to Berlinger, is to use a special machine sold by the company for about $2,000; it cracks the bottle’s cap in half, making it apparent that the sample has been touched. Dr. The bottles were handed to a man who he believed worked for the Russian intelligence service, the F.S.B.

Is Icarus true?

Icarus is a 2017 American documentary film by Bryan Fogel. It chronicles Fogel’s exploration of the option of doping to win an amateur cycling race and happening upon a major international doping scandal when he asks for the help of Grigory Rodchenkov, the head of the Russian anti-doping laboratory.