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  • Give Aussie athletes a fair go: ASC

    Daily Telegraph, Australia
    The Advertiser, Australia
    Brisbane Courier Mail, Australia
    Melbourne Herald Sun, Australia
    NEWS.com.au, Australia
    July 14 2004

    Give Aussie athletes a fair go: ASC


    THE Australian Sports Commission today called for a fair go for the
    country's Olympians as another cyclist became the third athlete
    dumped from the team for Athens.

    Former world champion sprint cyclist Sean Eadie was cut from the team
    over doping allegations, just five days after fellow cyclist Jobie
    Dajka and weightlifter Caroline Pileggi suffered similar fates.

    But the ASC asked the public to keep an open mind about the innocence
    and dedication of the vast majority of the 480 or so Australian
    athletes expected to go to Athens for the Olympics from August 13-29.

    "I just ask that they (the public) take a deep breath and think of
    all the athletes that have given their all to represent their country
    in Athens," said Mark Peters, executive director of the federal
    government-funded sports body.

    "Any suggestion that there is a drugs crisis in Australian sport or
    that there has been an attempt to cover up are just plain wrong."

    Prime Minister John Howard weighed into the debate today saying he
    hoped the Australian Olympic Committee could live up to its
    commitment for a drug-free team in Athens.

    "I hope that that goal can be realised," Mr Howard told ABC radio.

    At this stage the drug allegations are restricted to cycling and
    weightlifting.

    Cycling Australia withdrew Eadie's nomination after the AOC wrote to
    them saying the cyclist was not an acceptable team member.

    Eadie, 35, who has never returned a positive drugs test, was issued
    with an anti-doping infraction notice after Customs said they had
    intercepted a package of banned human growth hormones mailed to his
    address from San Diego, California in January 1999.

    Eadie denies all knowledge of the matter.

    He has 48 hours to appeal against his dropping from the team, and he
    is already appealing separately against the infraction notice issued
    to him over the mailed package of growth hormone tablets.

    "It's a complicated legal process, and that's the lawyers' job," he
    said.

    "My job is to train and that's going very, very well."

    Dajka's place in the Olympic team is on hold pending awaiting a
    report from South Australian police into an investigation into him,
    Eadie and three other cyclists over claims made by now banned cyclist
    Mark French.

    Investigator Robert Anderson, QC, said he was not satisfied with some
    of Dajka's testimony, including the fact he had lied about his
    involvement with greyhound racing.

    Meanwhile Pileggi, dumped for refusing a doping test in Fiji last
    month, is appealing her case at the Administrative Appeals Tribunal
    in Melbourne tomorrow.

    And Australia's sole male weightlifter for Athens, Sergo Chakhoyan,
    who served a two-year ban after a positive test at the 2001 Brisbane
    Goodwill Games, has had his nomination for Athens deferred pending
    the outcome of recent drug test conducted in Armenia.
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