BEIJING, Feb 12 ― Russian figure skater Kamila Valieva's Winter Olympics will be decided not on the ice rink but by a group of women and men at a boardroom table in a five-star Beijing hotel a short drive from the stadium where she thrilled the world this week.

The 15-year-old prodigy became the first woman to land a quadruple jump at the Olympics on Monday, winning a team figure skating gold with the Russian Olympic Committee (ROC).

But the International Testing Agency (ITA) said yesterday she had tested positive for a banned angina drug, rocking the Games and renewing focus on past Russian doping violations.

With Valieva due to compete again on Tuesday in the single event, the Court of Arbitration for Sport's (CAS) six-member panel is under pressure to hold its closed-door hearings ― on the second floor of the Continental Grand Hotel ― and rule before then.

If sent home, Valieva would be one of the youngest athletes ever removed from the Olympics for doping.

Her urine sample, showing presence of Trimetazidine, was collected on December 25 last year. But the results were only reported to official bodies on Tuesday, the day after her dazzling performance in the Capital Indoor stadium to the stirring sound of Maurice Ravel's Bolero.

An automatic provisional suspension, imposed after any positive test, was lifted by the Russian Anti-Doping Agency on Wednesday. But the International Olympic Committee and WADA have filed appeal to CAS to reinstate it, the court said.

‘In memoriam’?

CAS has set up two temporary offices in Beijing ― one for legal disputes and one for doping issues ― to provide rapid resolution services during the Games.

It said on Saturday it would be the legal disputes office that would handle the case rather than the anti-doping unit.

American lawyer Michael Lenard is president of that office with Slovenian former skater and lawyer Tjasa Andree-Prosenc and Swiss Corinne Schmidhauser as co-presidents.

The arbitrators will be chosen from a pool that includes China's Xianyue Bai, Australian Annabelle Bennett, American Jeffrey Benz, Slovenian judge Vesna Bergant Rakocevic, Maria Gwynn from Paraguay, as well as Dane Lars Hilliger, Italy's Fabio Iudica and France's Jingzhou Tao and Alain Zahlan de Cayetti, France

It is not the first time CAS has a big part to play at the Olympics, with doping a dark part of sport for decades now.

Russian athletes are competing as ROC athletes ― without a national flag and without their anthem at medal ceremonies ― for the third Games in a row as a result of sanctions over a state-backed doping system.

Their young star, Valieva, will now nervously await the CAS ruling, hoping more music used en route to gold ― Kirill Richter's In Memoriam ― does not prove prophetic of her Olympic dreams in China. ― Reuters