Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

IWF suspends five more weightlifters for failing pre-Olympics drug

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • IWF suspends five more weightlifters for failing pre-Olympics drug

    IWF suspends five more weightlifters for failing pre-Olympics drug tests

    By ALAN ROBINSON
    .c The Associated Press


    ATHENS, Greece (AP) - Five weightlifters were suspended Thursday for
    flunking drug tests they took before the Olympics, including two who
    were pulled out just before walking to the lifting stand.

    The International Weightlifting Federation said the suspended lifters
    were Wafa Ammouri of Morocco, Zoltan Kecskes of Hungary, Viktor
    Chislean of Moldova, Pratima Kumari Na of India and Sule Sahbaz of
    Turkey - raising to 20 the number of world-class weightlifters
    suspended this year.

    Normally, suspensions are for two years unless the athlete is a repeat
    offender. Earlier this year, 2000 Olympic champion Galabin Boevski was
    banned for eight years following a second failed drug test.

    Sahbaz is the most accomplished of the latest group, winning a
    European championship in 2002 and finishing third in the world
    championships at 77kg in 2003. He was second in the European
    championships in April. Kecskes had an eighth-place finish at the 1996
    Atlanta Olympics.

    Ammouri and Kecskes were to have lifted Wednesday, but were suspended
    just before their competitions. Kecskes was on the start list
    distributed to the media less than an hour before he was to have
    lifted, but he didn't compete.

    The news was welcomed by International Olympic Committee president
    Jacques Rogge.

    ``The IOC praises the work and determination of the weightlifting
    federation in its fight against doping by testing its athletes on a
    systematic basis according to its rules,'' he said in a statement.

    The cases are the latest setback for a sport plagued by cheating
    athletes in the last two Olympics, one that is threatening to
    overshadow some exceptional performances on the lifting
    stand. However, unlike the Sydney Games, the latest suspensions do not
    involve weightlifters who have already competed or won medals.

    So far, only one lifter who competed has been suspended: on Monday,
    Myanmar's Nan Aye Khine was stripped of her fourth-place finish
    Saturday at 48kg after failing her test.

    Embarrassed by four failed tests at the 2000 Games - three that cost
    Bulgarians medals - the IWF tried to crack down on cheating earlier
    this year by banning three Bulgarians well before the games began. Two
    of Boevski's Bulgarian teammates, former world champions Zlatan Vanev
    and Georgi Markov, drew 18-month suspensions that barred them from
    competing in Athens.

    The three tampered with their doping tests nine months ago at the 2003
    world championships in Vancouver by submitting urine samples that came
    from the same person, the IWF said.

    Eleven other weightlifters from 10 nations failed drug tests in
    Vancouver, according to the IWF - including Shang Shichun, who set
    three world records while winning the women's 75kg for China. Banned
    substances were found in the tests of nine men and two women.

    Other 2003 medalists suspended and stripped of their medals were 69kg
    silver medalist Vladislav Lukanin, Russia; 77kg silver medalist Gevorg
    Davtyan, Armenia; 105 kg-plus silver medalist Artem Udachyn, Ukraine;
    and 62kg bronze medalist Henadzi Aliashchuk, Belarus.

    Sahbaz moved up to a bronze medal in Vancouver because Davtyan failed
    his drug test.

    Others who failed in Vancouver were Sanjar Kadyrbergenov,
    Turkmenistan; Vladimir Popov, Moldova; Khalid A. Himdan, Iraq;
    Mohammad Swara, Iraq; Dmitriy Lomakin, Kazakhstan; and Hungary's Ilona
    Danko. Danko, who finished fourth, said she took an unspecified
    diuretic to speed weight loss.

    In Sydney, Bulgaria's Izabela Dragneva's gold in the first women's
    event at the Olympics was given instead to the United States' Tara
    Nott. Nott, now known as Tara Cunningham, and Dragneva returned to
    Athens but neither won medals Saturday, the first day of
    competition. Dragneva was suspended for two years before being
    reinstated.

    Two Romanians also tested positive just before the Sydney Games, and
    the day the Bulgarian drug scandal broke, two Qatar lifters who
    trained in Bulgaria were scratched from the event without explanation.

    Bulgaria's entire team was temporarily banned, but was reinstated by
    the Court of Arbitration for Sport. Afterward, Alan Tsagaev went on to
    win a silver medal. Romania's team was also banned by the IWF
    following three failed drug tests within a year, but was allowed to
    stay in the 2000 Games by paying a $50,000 fine.

    Thursday's drug suspensions came a day after Croatia's Nikolai
    Peshalov won a record-tying fourth Olympic weightlifting medal, a
    bronze; Zhang Guozheng lifted China's third weightlifting gold medal
    in as many events, and Ukraine's Natalia Skakun overcame a big deficit
    to take the gold and force Belarus' record-setting Hanna Batsiushka to
    settle for silver.

    Next up Thursday, China looks for more golds from double gold medalist
    Zhan Xugang in a very competitive men's 77kg weight class and
    19-year-old world champion Liu Chonhong in women's 63kg.

    08/19/04 06:15 EDT
Working...
X