Australia’s Olympic delegation head Kitty Chiller has questioned Russia’s determination to eliminate drug cheats after it was announced that the country would host an alternative event for banned track and field athletes in Moscow.

On Wednesday, the International Association of Athletics Federation (IAAF) upheld the ban on 67 Russian track and field athletes for systematic state-sponsored doping, ending any hopes they had of competing at next month’s Rio Games.

The Moscow tournament, which was announced by Russian state news agency TASS, will feature banned athletes including Olympic high jump champion Ivan Ukhov and world 110 metres hurdles champion Sergey Shubenkov.

“On one hand Russia is saying they want to change their system and the culture of doping in their country,” Chiller told reporters in Rio.

“And yet to organise an event for those cheats and for those dopers I think is completely the wrong message.”

The Australian gymnastics team are awaiting a decision by the international federation (FIG) on Russian athletes to see if they will replace them, while the women’s eight rowing crew has been handed a berth in place of a banned Russian team.

Chiller, however, feels Australian athletes should avoid getting distracted by the Russian doping situation when they are in Rio de Janeiro.

“I’ll be encouraging all our team members in all our sports to focus on their own performance. The (Russian) decision has been made, there is nothing we can do about it,” Chiller added.

“The hurdles that those Russian athletes who have been cleared to compete, the hurdles that they had to jump to be here are very strict and very high.

“We need to accept that pro-cess, it was a strict, it was a fair process, and get on with it. Focus on our own lane, on our performance and focus on our own best result that we can possibly do.”

Cyclists withdrawn

Three Russian cyclists have been withdrawn from the Rio Games by the Russian Olympic Committee (ROC), three riders are under investigation by the sport’s world governing body and 11 are eligible to compete, the UCI said.

“The UCI, through the Cycling Anti-Doping Foundation, is in the process of identifying relevant rider samples and is in close dialogue with WADA to move forward with these cases immediately,” the governing body said in a statement, referring to the riders under investigation.

“Three other riders who have previously been sanctioned for Anti-Doping Rule Violations have been withdrawn by the ROC,” the UCI said, adding that 11 other Russian riders were eligible to compete at next month’s Games.

Sign up to our free newsletters

Get the best updates straight to your inbox:
Please select at least one mailing list.

You can unsubscribe at any time by clicking the link in the footer of our emails. We use Mailchimp as our marketing platform. By subscribing, you acknowledge that your information will be transferred to Mailchimp for processing.