World champion sprinter Justin Gatlin has accepted an eight-year
ban for a second doping offence.
The American joint world record holder over 100 metres had been
facing a lifetime ban from the sport after testing positive for a
banned anabolic drug, possibly testosterone, at a Kansas City
meeting on April 22.
But, the United States Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) announced on
Tuesday that Gatlin had decided to accept the accuracy of the
laboratory results and that it constituted a doping violation.
Along with the ban, Gatlin will lose the world record mark of
9.77 seconds he set in Doha on May 12 - which he shared with
Jamaican Asafa Powell.
The 24-year-old will not be able to compete again until he is 32
years old, and will miss the prime years for a sprinter. Many
believe it is unlikely Gatlin will ever compete on the world
stage.
"Gatlin has agreed to cooperate with USADA by providing
information that may assist in USADA's anti-doping efforts," a
statement from the drug-fighting agency said.
"In exchange for Gatlin's promise to cooperate and in
recognition of the exceptional circumstances of his prior
violation, USADA has agreed that the maximum period of suspension
for this violation would be eight years."
The agency said the disgraced sprinter would still have the
right to appeal to an arbritation panel in the next six months to
have the ban reduced, but he cannot now argue that the test was
faulty.
US Track and Field chief executive Craig Masback said he was
happy that Gatlin had accepted responsibility but nevertheless he
was still disappointed in him.
"Justin Gatlin's doping case has been a setback for our sport,"
said Masback. "While we are glad Justin has taken responsibility
for his positive test and will cooperate in USADA's anti-doping
efforts, we are sorely disappointed in him.
"Our Zero Tolerance programme is focused on educating athletes
about the importance of winning with integrity. This case is a
clear signal that we must redouble our efforts and seek ways to
deter drug use and to punish anyone who may influence athletes to
use drugs."
Gatlin had painted himself as a role model for the anti-doping
movement, despite a positive test for an amphetamine in 2001, when
he was still a student at the University of Tennessee.
He argued then that it was contained in a medication he was
prescribed for attention deficit disorder and was reinstated before
serving all of a two-year ban.
By agreeing to cooperate with USADA in the fight against drugs,
Gatlin avoided a lifetime ban, but at 24 years old, his career as a
top athletics star is still effectively over unless he wins a
substantial reduction.
Gatlin himself announced his failed doping test on July 29, but
insisted that he had never knowingly used any banned substance.
His controversial coach Trevor Graham hit back that Gatlin had
tested positive for drugs due to the revenge actions of a masseur
who applied testosterone green on him without his knowledge.
The test that produced the positive result came just weeks
before Gatlin matched Powell's 100m world record of 9.77sec at a
meeting in Doha.
Gatlin is among an elite group of athletes - including Americans
Carl Lewis and Maurice Greene and Canadian Donovan Bailey - to hold
the world and Olympic titles along with the world record.
In addition to his 100m gold, he earned Olympic bronze in the
200m and a silver in the 4x100m relay in 2004. Last year in
Helsinki he added the 100m world title and also captured the 200m
crown.
With his performance in Doha, he was briefly credited with sole
possession of the coveted world record with a time of 9.76sec, but
the time was later officially revised to 9.77 - tying the mark
Powell set in Athens on June 14, 2005.
The USADA statement said that the ban on Gatlin would begin on
August 15, 2006 and end "with credit given since the time Gatlin
began serving a provisional suspension on July 25" on July 24 2014.
All his results subsequent to the failed test on April 22,
including his world record run in May, will be scrapped, it
added.
(China Daily August 24, 2006)