Swimming: FINA need to crack down
on 'drug cheat' Sun - Fraser
Send a link to a friend
[July 24, 2019]
SYDNEY (Reuters) - Chinese
swimmer Sun Yang is a "drug cheat" who should not be competing at
the world championships and governing body FINA need to "get off
their backsides" to protect clean athletes, Australian swimming
great Dawn Fraser has said.
Triple Olympic champion Sun was cleared to swim at Gwangju despite
the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) set to hear a doping case
against him in September.
He has already claimed two freestyle titles at the worlds but his
presence has angered rivals, with Australia's Mack Horton refusing
to share a podium with him at the 400 meters medals ceremony and
Briton Duncan Scott declining to shake his hand after the 200.
Fraser, who won the 100m freestyle at three different Olympics from
1956-64, told reporters in Sydney that FINA should never have
allowed Sun to compete at Gwangju.
"I personally don't think he should be swimming," she said on
Wednesday. "He's got a Court of Arbitration in September and I feel
that FINA should have stepped him down until that court case is
over.
"If he's proven not guilty, well that's fine, he can go back to
swimming.
"I mean we go back to East Germany when all those German swimmers
were caught with drugs. We want a clean sport and let's protest
against it. FINA got to get off their backsides and do something
about it."
Sun served a three-month ban for a doping offense in 2014 that was
kept under wraps by FINA and the Chinese Swimming Association and
emerged only well after it had expired.
Sun blamed the failed drug test that led to that ban on medication
he said he was taking for a heart condition and did not know was
prohibited.
His latest doping brush involves an aborted test last year in which
he was alleged to have smashed a container holding one of his blood
samples with a hammer.
He was cleared by a FINA Doping Panel in January over the test but
the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) has filed an appeal to CAS.
[to top of second column] |
Sun Yang of China before the race. REUTERS/Stefan Wermuth
Olympic champion Horton, runnerup in the 400 at Gwangju, labeled Sun
a "drug cheat" at the 2016 Rio Games, triggering a fierce response
in China.
His podium protest on Sunday was pilloried by Chinese state media
and prompted a warning from FINA.
Fraser defended Horton for making his stand.
"Mack didn't say anything. He hasn't made any comment, he just
didn't get on the podium to be with a drug cheat, and I support
that," she said, calling for WADA and FINA to "do their job".
"At the moment, both of those (bodies) are fighting one another and
WADA said he shouldn't be swimming.
"They should have the right to stop anyone taking drugs from
swimming or competing in any sort of sport.
"We've been fighting for a clean sport for quite a number of years,
its still hasn't taken place. There's still drug cheats out there
and we want them banished."
(Reporting by Jill Gralow; Writing by Ian Ransom; Editing by Sudipto
Ganguly)
[© 2019 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2019 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|