American Salazar, who coached some of the
world's top distance runners including British Olympic and world
champion Mo Farah, was banned by the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency (USADA)
in October for "orchestrating and facilitating" doping as head
coach of the Nike Oregon Project (NOP).
Swiss-based CAS, the world's highest sports court, said on
Tuesday it would hear appeals from Salazar and endocrinologist
Jeffrey Brown between Nov. 8-16.
Brown, who worked for NOP on performance enhancement and served
as a physician for numerous athletes in the training program,
was also banned by USADA for four years.
Nike Inc, which funds NOP -- an elite long-distance running
training centre in Portland under a long-term sponsorship deal
with U.S. Track and Field -- has previously said it would
support Salazar's bid to clear his name.
No NOP runner was directly implicated in doping by USADA.
Salazar won three consecutive New York City marathons from 1980
before coaching a slew of Olympians, including Farah, who won
the 5,000 and 10,000m golds at the London and Rio Olympics
before splitting with the American in 2017.
Farah has never failed a drugs test and has not been accused of
any wrongdoing.
(Reporting by Ian Ransom; Editing by Peter Rutherford)
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