Ukrainian and Russian athletes are scheduled to start a World Cup men's luge race in consecutive order on Saturday, meaning it is almost certain that athletes from those nations will cross paths at least near the start of the track.
The start order for the race in Lake Placid, New York, was posted Thursday. Ukraine's Andriy Mandziy will be the second starter down the hill at Mount Van Hoevenberg, and he'll be immediately followed by Matvei Perestoronin — a Russian slider who is being allowed to compete as an independent neutral athlete.
That means Mandziy and Perestoronin will be in close proximity to one another at the top of the track, and probably again somewhere in the finish area once their first runs Saturday are complete. It also raises the likelihood that coaches from Ukraine and Russia may interact.
The start order for the race worked out that way because of how the order of finish played out from Thursday's Nations Cup race in Lake Placid, a one-heat qualifier for the World Cup competition. The first five starting spots in the World Cup race went to the top five finishers from the Nations Cup race, in reverse order.
Nations Cup winner Jonny Gustafson of the U.S. will start fifth and Nations Cup runner-up Tucker West of the U.S. will start fourth. Perestoronin was third and Mandizy fourth, meaning they'll be next to one another on the start sheet Saturday. Italy's Lukas Peccei was fifth in Nations Cup, so he'll be the first one down the hill.
Russia hoped to send six athletes to this World Cup weekend in Lake Placid; three lost their eligibility after new evidence was presented to the International Luge Federation suggesting that they were not neutral about the war that started when Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022. The three Russian sliders that remain in the field — Perestoronin and Pavel Repilov on the men's side, Daria Olesik on the women's side — all qualified for the World Cup races to essentially keep their hopes of reaching the Milan Cortina Olympics alive.
The three remaining Russians have been training in Lake Placid this week, but in separate groups from the Ukrainians.
The International Olympic Committee wants Russian athletes to have the opportunity to compete as neutrals in some individual sports at Milan Cortina. There are Russian sliders trying to qualify in men's luge, women's luge, men's skeleton, women's skeleton and women's monobob — but not in any team sports such as a luge doubles event, or any bobsled race involving two- or four-person teams.