Athletics: Jamaica's Carter loses CAS appeal
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[June 01, 2018]
By Kayon Raynor
KINGSTON (Reuters) - Nesta Carter, the
2013 world 100 meters bronze medalist, has lost his appeal to the
Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) against the International
Olympic Committee's decision to strip him and his Jamaica men's
sprint relay team mates of their gold medals from the 2008 Beijing
Olympics.
The Switzerland-based court handed down the ruling six months after
the appeal was heard in November. “The Panel concluded that the
reanalysis of Nesta Carter’s sample collected following the race at
the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games confirmed the presence of
methylhexaneamine (MHA) and that it could not accept any of the
arguments raised by Nesta Carter contending that the test results
should be ignored or the IOC DP decision should otherwise be
overturned for certain alleged failures," CAS said in a statement on
Thursday. Carter, 32, and team mates Usain Bolt, Asafa Powell,
Michael Frater and Dwight Thomas will not be given back the gold
medals they were ordered to return by the IOC in January, 2017.
Carter, who helped the Caribbean nation win gold medals at the 2008
and 2012 Olympics and the 2011, 2013 and 2015 world championships,
was not immediately available for comment. His Jamaica-based
attorney Stuart Stimpson said a statement would be issued later on
Thursday.
“The rules are the rules,” three-times Olympic 100 and 200 meters
champion Bolt told Reuters.
“But at the end of the day the joy of winning that relay gold medal
in Beijing 2008 with my team mates will last forever,” said world
record-holder Bolt, who retired last year and now has eight Olympic
gold medals to his name.
Frater, who ran the second leg in Beijing 10 years ago, reacted with
disappointment to the ruling.
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Jamaican sprinter Nesta Carter arrives for an appeal hearing at the
Court of Arbitration for Sports (CAS) in Lausanne, Switzerland
November 15, 2017. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse
“Obviously, I’m very disappointed I thought the case was long
overdue for a decision and it was dragged out, but if that’s the
decision that they are sticking by, I just will have to live with
it, but I am very disappointed with it,” Frater said.
The CAS ruling came almost two years after news broke that Carter's
was part of a batch of 454 samples from the 2008 Beijing Games which
the IOC ordered to be re-tested.
Carter, the sixth fastest man in history with a time of 9.78 seconds
for 100 meters recorded in 2010, was cited for returning a positive
test in a re-tested sample from the 2008 Olympic Games where he was
lead-off runner in Jamaica's sprint relay team. Carter still has
three world championship sprint relay gold medals in addition to the
London 2012 Olympic gold, which Jamaica won in a world record time
of 36.84 seconds.
(Reporting by Kayon Raynor, editing by Ed Osmond)
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