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Banned Russian athletes take lifetime ban appeals to Court of Arbitration for Sport

The Olympic rings are seen above the entrance on the facade of the Olympic Museum in Lausanne, Switzerland
Image: Thirty-nine Russian athletes have taken their appeal to CAS

Dozens of Russian athletes banned for life by the International Olympic Committee for doping will seek to overturn their punishment from Monday at the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS).

The week-long hearing will include appeals from 39 Russians who competed at the 2014 Winter Games in Sochi, which were tarnished by a vast, Moscow-backed doping scheme, according to multiple independent investigations.

The mass hearing will be an extraordinary session for CAS and forced the court to temporarily move from its small headquarters in Lausanne to a large conference centre in Geneva.

Another three Russian biathletes have also appealed against their IOC ban, but their cases will be heard later.

Among the witnesses scheduled to testify is Grigory Rodchenkov, the former head of Russia's anti-doping lab (RUSADA).

Alexander Legkov of Russia in action during the Nordic World Ski Championships in 2015
Image: Sochi cross-country ski gold medallist Alexander Legkov is among the athletes appealing

He was the key whistleblower who exposed the cheating programme that IOC president Thomas Bach has described as an "unprecedented attack on the integrity of the Olympics".

But Rodchenkov will not testify in person. Instead, he will appear via video-link from the United States, where he fled after the sudden deaths of two senior ex-RUSADA executives.

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Canadian lawyer Richard McLaren has also been announced as a witness.

McLaren authored the report on Russian cheating for the World Anti-Doping Agency that read in part like a Cold War spy novel, and laid out the workings of the programme - from the use secret state agents to passing urine samples out of testing labs through mouseholes.