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Sydney: Weightlifting hit by new doping claims

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  • Sydney: Weightlifting hit by new doping claims

    Sydney morning herald, Australia
    July 7 2004

    Weightlifting hit by new doping claims



    New doping allegations threaten to disrupt Australian weightlifting
    on the eve of the Athens Olympics.

    The Australian Weightlifting Federation (AWF) has launched an
    investigation after being told by the Australian Sports Drug Agency
    (ASDA) Tuesday that an unnamed lifter had refused to take a drug
    test.

    The Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) is expected to hear the case
    next week.

    Australia's Olympic weightlifting team is due to be named on Friday.

    Caroline Pileggi and Armenian-born Sergo Chakhoyan are expected to be
    named as the only two weightlifters on the Australian team.

    "There is an incident that is causing us some concern which is being
    looked at right now," said AWF president Sam Coffa, who would only
    identify the athlete as being an AWF member.

    The average penalty for such an offence is a two-year ban.

    The Australian Olympic Committee and the Australian Sports Commission
    are monitoring the situation and have offered to help the federation
    present its case against the athlete, who is contesting the charge.

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    Coffa said that once the investigation was complete, the findings
    would be made public, regardless of whether the athlete in question
    was guilty or not.

    "Innuendos and rumours have a life of their own and they develop
    legs. Somebody will say something and somebody will say something
    else, and I believe it's unhealthy," Coffa said. "If there is a
    doping case we immediately make a public statement and if it's the
    other way around and someone has been wrongly accused we will say
    that too."

    Caroline Pileggi (+75kg) is expected to be the sole Australian
    women's representative and has an outside chance of winning an
    Olympic medal.

    The 25-year-old, who claimed gold when women debuted in the sport at
    the Commonwealth Games in 2002, has overcome shoulder problems which
    kept her out of last year's world championships.

    She competed at the Oceania championships in Fiji in May and the
    selection trials two weeks ago in Melbourne.

    Armenian-born Sergo Chakhoyan (85kg) missed those events to train in
    the country of his birth.

    He looms as the man to claim Australia's second ever Olympic gold
    medal, 20 years after Port Lincoln fisherman Dean Lukin made the
    breakthrough.

    Chakhoyan was suspended in 2001 for two years for using steroids.

    The latest allegations involving Australian weightlifting come after
    Anthony Martin last month accepted a two-year ban for testing
    positive to banned substances.

    Commonwealth Games bronze medal winner Seen Lee will appeal a
    two-year ban for testing positive in May to the diuretic furosemide.
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