Four Russians, all skeleton racers, were banned by the International Olympic Committee for doping, including men's gold medalist Alexander Tretyakov and women's bronze medalist Elena Nikitina.
Russia, which finished the games at the top of the medals table with 13 gold and 33 overall, has now been stripped of six medals based on evidence of a state-sponsored doping program in Sochi, including samples being swapped in the laboratory. Two of the six medals were gold.
If the IOC decides to upgrade athletes who finished behind the banned Russians, the table would change again. Two other Russian women who didn't win medals, Maria Orlova and Olga Potylitsina, were also banned today.
Russian officials said all four banned athletes will file appeals.
"We are absolutely sure of the innocence of our athletes and will stand up for their rights," the Russian Bobsled Federation, which governs skeleton, said in a statement.
Without positive doping tests, the IOC disciplinary panel used evidence of cover-ups and tampering of sample bottles first gathered last year by McLaren's team.
The IOC will decide on December 5 if Russia can compete at the 2018 Pyeongchang Games.
The ban for Tretyakov puts Latvia in line for its first Winter Olympic gold medal. If the IOC formally reallocates the medals, Martins Dukurs would be upgraded to gold. It would also mean silver for Matthew Antoine of the United States and bronze for Dukurs' brother, Tomass.
The IOC sanctions disqualify the four Russian skeleton racers from the Sochi Olympics and also ban them from all future Olympics.
Russian Olympic Committee president Alexander Zhukov said more sanctions are possible.
"I think we can expect the same decisions for the bobsledders and the female hockey players," Zhukov said. "The rulings are all the same."
Russia won two gold medals in men's bobsled at the 2014 Olympics, but there has been no official confirmation that the IOC is investigating. The Russian women's hockey team didn't win a medal.
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