- A German skater said those responsible for Kamila Valieva's failed drug test should be barred.
- Katarina Witt said on Facebook Valieva likely followed the advice of her coach and medical team.
German skating legend Katarina Witt said adults responsible for
"As an athlete, you follow the advice of your loved ones and, in this case, always first of all the coaching and medical team," Witt, a two-time Olympic champion, wrote on Facebook Thursday. "You just trust that they know what is right and what is wrong."
The International Testing Agency said on Thursday that Valieva — who made history earlier this week as the first woman skater to land quadruple jumps at the Olympics — tested positive in December for a banned substance. But Witt doesn't believe the 15-year-old skater is at fault.
"She is not to blame here," Witt wrote. "If anything, the responsible adults should be banned from sport forever."
Witt added that, as an athlete, "you always follow the advice of your confidants."
In Valieva's case, Witt said, "she probably followed her coach and medical team."
"I admire Kamila as a radiant star, who burst into the orbit of the international skating world," Witt said. "And I still very much wish she has come to stay."
Valieva's performance in the Olympic figure-skating team event helped power the Russian Olympic Committee to a gold medal — an achievement that the organization has vowed to defend. But since the discovery of the positive test for Trimetazidine — a heart medication typically used to treat the symptoms of vertigo — the medal ceremony has been delayed indefinitely.
The World Anti-Doping Agency categorizes the drug as a "hormone and metabolic modulator," per the Associated Press. When taken without proper cause, the drug can help bolster endurance and improve circulation. Both effects could give a high-level figure skater a significant competitive advantage.
Valieva was initially slapped with a provisional suspension from Russia's anti-doping agency (RUSADA) after the positive test surfaced. However, following a swift appeal, the ban was overturned on February 9. As of now, the Kazan, Russia, native is still free to compete in Beijing.
That could soon change, though. The International Olympic Committee has exercised its right to challenge that decision at the Court of Arbitration for Sport, the ITA said.
Meanwhile, the ROC said Valieva "has the right to train and take part in competitions in full without restriction" unless the CAS says otherwise.
Valieva is set compete in the individual competition on February 15.