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Sprinter
Gatlin receives four-year drugs ban
WASHINGTON—Reigning 100-meter Olympic champion Justin Gatlin was
suspended for four years for a 2006 doping violation and forfeits his
former 100m world record run, the US Anti-Doping Agency announced
Tuesday.
A three-member arbitration panel voted 2-1 to impose a four-year ban
upon the 25-year-old American sprinter who captured gold at the 2004
Athens Games. The punishment stems from a positive test for testosterone
by Gatlin at the Kansas Relays on April 22, 2006. Gatlin tested positive
for a stimulant at a college meet earlier in his career so was treated
as a repeat offender.
Gatlin could extend his 20-month fight by appealing the verdict to the
Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS), the final legal recourse to
overturn what would otherwise likely be a career-ending banishment. In
addition to a four-year ban set to end May 24, 2010, Gatlin must forfeit
all results after the positive tests, including his 9.77-second victory
in the 100m at the Qatar Super Grand Prix in Doha on May 12, 2006.
That effort matched the then-world record owned by Jamaica’s Asafa
Powell, who lowered the mark to 9.74 seconds last September in Italy.
Also lost in the doping punishment for elevated testosterone levels was
Gatlin’s 2006 US 100m crown.
The lengthy majority finding and a dissent from the third arbitrator
were released by the panel Monday night. Gatlin, the 2005 world 100m and
200m champion, was devastated by the decision that could doom his hopes
of racing at the Beijing Olympics, the Washington Post reported Tuesday,
citing people close to Gatlin in first revealing Gatlin’s fate. Two of
the trio of arbitrators who heard the case July 29-31 declared they
could not impose anything less than a four-year ban upon Gatlin because
of his prior positive test. First violations usually draw a two-year ban
with life bans possible for repeat offenders.
Gatlin argued to arbitartors that his secret recording of telephone
calls with his former coach and assistant coach to gather evidence for a
federal steroid investigation should be considered in imposing a
sentence. Arbitrators noted Gatlin’s record “reflects extended
assistance to the US government which goes far beyond the contemplated
assistance to anti-doping sports authorities” in handing down four years
rather than a longer ban.
“Mr. Gatlin should be commended for his decision to cooperate with
authorities following his positive test,” USADA chief executive officer
Travis Tygart said. “However, these efforts do not completely remove his
responsibility for his second doping offense.
“Given his cooperation and the circumstances relating to Mr. Gatlin’s
first offense, the four-year penalty issued by the arbitration panel is
a fair and just outcome.” Gatlin said if he had knowingly taken
performance-enhancing drugs, it would have been revealed in 10 telephone
calls he recorded in 2006 with former coach Trevor Graham or Randall
Evans, Graham’s assistant.—Agencis |