Leading coach Salazar gets
four-year ban for doping violations
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[October 01, 2019]
By Gene Cherry
DOHA (Reuters) - Leading American
athletics coach Alberto Salazar, who has coached some of the world's
top distance runners including British Olympic track champion Mo
Farah, has been banned for four years for doping violations.
The U.S. Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) said Salazar's punishment was
for "orchestrating and facilitating prohibited doping conduct" as
head coach of the Nike Oregon Project (NOP), a camp designed
primarily to develop U.S. endurance athletes.
After the ban was announced, the U.S. Track and Field Federation (USATF)
removed Salazar's accreditation for the world athletics
championships in Doha.
Salazar said he would appeal USADA's decision, and sportswear giant
Nike said in a statement that it would stand by him.
"I am shocked by the outcome today," Salazar said in a statement.
"My athletes and I have endured unjust, unethical and highly
damaging treatment from USADA."
"The Oregon Project has never and will never permit doping. I will
appeal and look forward to this unfair and protracted process
reaching the conclusion I know to be true. I will not be commenting
further at this time."
USADA said that Salazar, who also coached American Olympian Matthew
Centrowitz among other top distance runners, trafficked banned
performance-enhancing substance testosterone to multiple athletes.
Salazar also tampered or attempted to tamper with NOP athletes'
doping control process, the agency said after concluding its
four-year investigation.
Jeffrey Brown, who worked as a paid consultant endocrinologist for
NOP on performance enhancement and served as a physician for
numerous athletes in the training program, also received a four-year
ban.
Several members of NOP are competing in the 2019 IAAF World
Championships in Doha, Qatar.
None of the athletes Salazar has worked with were mentioned in
Monday's report.
Salazar stopped coaching Farah in 2017 when the runner decided to
move back to England. Farah said at the time that the doping
investigation was not the reason they parted ways.
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Coach Alberto Salazar sits inside the Bird's Nest Stadium at the
Wold Athletics Championships in Beijing, China, August 21, 2015.
REUTERS/Phil Noble
"The athletes in these cases found the courage to speak out and
ultimately exposed the truth," Travis Tygart, USADA chief executive
officer, said in a statement.
"While acting in connection with the Nike Oregon Project, Mr.
Salazar and Dr. Brown demonstrated that winning was more important
than the health and wellbeing of the athletes they were sworn to
protect."
Salazar said that Tygart's comment was misleading and he had never
put winning above the athletes' safety.
"This is completely false and contrary to the findings of the
arbitrators, who even wrote about the care I took in complying with
the World Anti-Doping code," he said.
Nike, which funds NOP, the nation's most elite long-distance running
training center in Portland under a $460 million, 26-year
sponsorship deal with US Track and Field, said it would support
Salazar's appeal.
"Today's decision had nothing to do with administering banned
substances to any Oregon Project athlete. As the panel noted, they
were struck by the amount of care Alberto took to ensure he was
complying with the World Anti-Doping code," it said.
"Nike does not condone the use of banned substances in any manner."
Salazar, 61, was a celebrated distance runner, winning three
consecutive New York City marathons starting in 1980.
(Reporting by Rory Carroll in Los Angeles and Gene Cherry in Doha;
Writing by Brian Homewood; editing by Jane Wardell and Hugh Lawson)
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