Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Olympics: Chakhoyan looks for gold in tarnished sport

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

  • Olympics: Chakhoyan looks for gold in tarnished sport

    AAP NEWSFEED (Australia)
    August 20, 2004, Friday 8:24 AM Eastern Time

    Wgt: Chakhoyan looks for gold in tarnished sport

    By Glenn Cullen

    Golden moments in Australian weightlifting have been few of late but
    there could be one tomorrow for Sergo Chakhoyan.

    The Armenian-born weightlifter is in contention for the gold medal in
    the 85kg class at the Games, along with hometown favourite and
    three-time gold medallist Pyrros Dimas, China's Aijan Yuan and Turk
    Izzet Ince.

    World weightlifting has already had its share of drugs scandals at
    this Olympics, with seven international competitors testing positive
    in out of competition tests before they had a chance to lift.

    While distanced from drugs controversies here so far, the Australians
    have not had a good record in the last six months.

    Two positive tests to fringe national squad members were followed by
    the debacle involving women's lifter Caroline Pileggi who was kicked
    off the team for failing to undergo a drugs test while training in
    Fiji.

    In between time there were questions raised about Chakhoyan, who
    tested positive to stanozolol and served a two year ban that finished
    in 2003.

    The Australian Olympic Committee complained it could not find the
    Armenian-based athlete for more than three months.

    He was drug tested, his result negative.

    Of more immediate concern tomorrow may be Chakhoyan's weight, which
    appears to have dropped in the competition lead-up.

    Sam Coffa, head of the Australian Weightlifting Federation, said it
    wasn't ideal.

    "I had heard he was losing a little bit of bodyweight and that's
    always a concern," he said.

    "You can't go into the competition having lost too much bodyweight.

    Coffa, who is also vice president of the International Weightlifing
    Federation and is officiating here, said he couldn't say why positive
    tests from lifters couldn't be confirmed before the Games to avoid
    the embarrassment here.

    "I don't know I am not really competent to answer those questions.
    There are medical and scientific reasons why this can't be done and
    there's all the logistics," he said.

    "But I am clearly a technical man so I don't interfere with those
    sorts of things."
Working...
X