New allegations against Russian athletes from the recently released McLaren report may be politically motivated, with sports being used to put pressure on the country, a cyclist who revealed a UK doping scandal told RT.
"It's total nonsense. Obviously, Russia has got problems, but I think
doping is clearly an endemic problem. It's wrong for WADA to allow anyone to focus on one nation. As far as I'm aware,
there hasn't been any other analysis of any other nation to the level that Russia has experienced," Dan Stevens told RT.
The former amateur British cyclist
blew the whistle on a doctor who allegedly doped 150 UK athletes.
Russia came back into the doping scandal spotlight following the
release of part two of the McLaren report on Friday.
The extended investigation by Canadian law professor Richard McLaren backed up his earlier findings of alleged state-sponsored cheating, adding a number of fresh accusations.
The report says the country created "an institutional doping conspiracy" across summer, winter, and Paralympic sports. Without providing any names, it claims that over 1,000 athletes benefited from the alleged plot to conceal positive doping tests between 2011 and 2015. The list is said to include Olympic medalists from the London and Sochi games.
Comment: See also: WADA publishes second whitewashed McLaren report, still provides no evidence of "state-sponsored doping" in Russia