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AOC uncovers tale of the disappearing weightlifter

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  • AOC uncovers tale of the disappearing weightlifter

    Sydney Morning Herald

    AOC uncovers tale of the disappearing weightlifter

    By Roy Masters
    July 14, 2004

    Weighty matter: Sergo Chakhoyan sets a world record at the Goodwill Games.
    Photo: Angela Wylie

    The Australian Olympic Committee suspects Australia's sole male weightlifter
    nominated for the Athens Olympics, Sergo Chakhoyan, went into hiding for
    three-and-a-half months before finally being tested for drugs on July 8 in
    Armenia.

    Acknowledging difficulties in obtaining details of Chakhoyan's overseas
    address, AOC president John Coates said: "Clearly, there were some issues
    concerning the provision of his whereabouts information and we should wait
    for the results of his tests."

    The AOC has deferred an announcement on Chakhoyan's selection in the team
    for Athens until his tests results are known.

    The Australian Sports Drug Agency has told the AOC it has asked the Austrian
    agency which tested Chakhoyan, 34, to expedite the analysis at a Vienna
    laboratory, with the test results expected late this week.

    Chakhoyan, who represented Armenia at the 1996 Atlanta Games, is rated No.1
    in the 85-kilogram class and won gold in the snatch at last year's world
    championships in Vancouver, and bronze in the clean-and-jerk.

    An Australian resident since 1997, he briefly stopped in Melbourne to
    celebrate before heading to Armenia before Christmas.

    The AOC investigated his situation following a directive from the World
    Anti-Doping Agency that all potential athletes for Athens declare their
    whereabouts and be tested from March 31.

    When the Australian Weighlifting Federation told the AOC on June 23 that
    Chakhoyan would be missing the national championships in Melbourne from June
    26 for "personal and family reasons", the search intensified.

    The AOC wrote to AWF president Sam Coffa on June 24 requesting information
    on Chakhoyan's location and it took another two weeks to find him.

    Coffa denies the AWF was unhelpful, saying: "There was no vital information
    withheld, willingly or unwillingly. His whereabouts have been known to
    everybody for months and they most certainly must have been on the ASDA
    database, otherwise they couldn't have found him."

    Chakhoyan tested positive at the Goodwill Games in Brisbane in September
    2001 and completed his mandatory two-year suspension last year.

    In Vancouver, he claimed his second world title, having won in the same
    weight category while representing Armenia in 1994. He came fifth at the
    Sydney Olympics representing Australia.

    Coates reflected doubts over Chakhoyan in a letter to ASDA chief executive
    John Mendoza on July 9, referring to "recent ASDA concerns regarding the
    whereabouts information supplied in respect of weightlifter Sergo Chakhoyan,
    who was eventually tested in Armenia overnight".

    The AOC said it had been notified that ASDA had "no doping matters in
    progress concerning any potential members of the 2004 Australian Olympic
    team".

    However, Customs has been asked to check its records on all Australian
    athletes from 2000, 2002 and 2004 teams.
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