Accordingly to (
NY Times)
The hearing was ONLY about
In other words :
Choosing between letting a young athlete compete despite a positive test OR the integrity of the competition for the 29 other athletes.
If they choose the first option, it simply means they will reinstate the provisional ban. Those bans are there for a reason : while the athlete can appeal and prove their cases, they are not allowed to compete.
The investigation, as I suspected, will be held much later. It often takes months to get the facts necessary for an athlete to prove they didn't do anything wrong.
If ever she is proven guilty, I believe that's only when she would be stripped of results from December 25th on. So those hoping for a quick team even medal ceremony, I wouldn't count on that, at least, not with the current information. So already, IMHO, some athletes are losing a very special moment in their lives from most likely 3 teams but maybe even a 4th team (if Kamila's results are stripped).
The ban could be lifted if Valieva manages to prove her innocence. Usually, these things take several months.
I am sharing this because I feel the debate about TMZ is no longer even relevant at this point. Like in other doping cases, the test results hold up until the athlete can prove otherwise, and that is a very hard task.
What I find puzzling here is how the other countries federation are not speaking up. I have seen nothing from other nations here. I believe that for instance, some countries like Japan or USA should speak up on the behalf of their athletes in the team event and of the individual event.