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US sprinter Tim Montgomery faces life ban
LONDON—Former world 100 metres record holder Tim Montgomery faces a life
ban on Tuesday when the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) releases
its decision on alleged doping offences by the US sprinter. Montgomery
has been accused of serious doping violations by the US Anti-Doping
Agency (USADA) after a federal investigation into the BALCO laboratory
in California. He has denied ever taking drugs. BALCO head Victor Conte,
who was sentenced to four months in prison in October after pleading
guilty to steroid distribution, said last year he had supplied
Montgomery and his partner, the triple Olympic champion Marion Jones,
with the designer steroid THG (tetrahydrogestrinone), EPO
(erythropoietin) and insulin.
In a separate television interview, Conte said he had witnessed Jones
using steroids. Jones, who has not been charged with any doping offence,
has denied the allegations. Under new USADA rules Montgomery can be
banned for a non-analytical positive, evidence of drug-taking other than
positive test. Michelle Collins, the 2003 indoor 200 metres champion,
accepted a four-year ban this year after USADA said it had established
beyond reasonable doubt that she had taken THG and EPO. If Montgomery is
banned by the independent Lausanne-based body, he will become the
highest profile athlete to be suspended since Ben Johnson tested
positive after winning the 1988 Seoul Olympic 100 metres final in world
record time. The Canadian was stripped of the gold medal and his time of
9.79 seconds was not recognised after a positive test for the anabolic
steroid stanozolol. Although several world 100 records have been broken
since 1988, nobody had run faster than Johnson until Montgomery clocked
9.78 seconds at the 2002 Paris grand prix final.—Agencies |