PARK CITY, Utah — Russian athletes have told the International Luge Federation that they obtained visas and are coming to the U.S. for a World Cup race next weekend, a move that Ukrainian athletes believe is simply unfair.
And it might not be long before Russians are competing on the bobsled and skeleton circuits again as well, with the federation that runs those sports releasing a list Friday of nine cleared athletes — two bobsledders and seven skeleton sliders.
The Russian luge team — about six athletes — is planning to compete in Lake Placid, New York, in an effort to boost fledgling hopes of qualifying for the Milan Cortina Olympics that are coming in February. Russia is not racing at this weekend's World Cup luge competition in Park City, Utah, despite some claims from Russian officials in recent days that they would be there.
Russia has not seen its athletes compete in a World Cup luge race since that country invaded Ukraine nearly four years ago. The war rages on, and now Ukrainian athletes are bracing for the likelihood of crossing paths with Russians in competition. It's of no consolation to the Ukrainian sliders that the Russians — if they arrive — will be competing as neutral athletes and not under their nation's flag.
''They are not neutral,'' Ukrainian luge athlete Anton Dukach said. ''They support war.''
Dukach is Ukraine's top Olympic hopeful in luge. He believes that, if he hadn't made it into a shelter in time, he would have been killed two years ago when a Russian rocket hit his apartment. Some of his neighbors, he said, died in that attack.
He's lost many friends and classmates in the war. He races with them in mind and cannot understand why Russians — who haven't been allowed to compete in many sports because of the war — now have sliders and others being given a shot at making it to the Olympics.
The neutrality issue is paramount. Certain sports federations are preparing to let Russian athletes compete, but only after they are cleared in what is described as an independent review process to ensure that they have not publicly supported the war and are not affiliated with Russia's military or other forces.