Biden on Richardson's sprinting suspension: 'the rules are the rules'
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[July 05, 2021]
CENTRAL LAKE, Mich (Reuters) - U.S.
President Joe Biden weighed in on the suspension of sprinter Sha'Carri
Richardson over marijuana use, saying Saturday "the rules are the
rules."
The U.S. Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) confirmed Richardson's suspension on
Friday after the sprinter known for brightly-colored hair and
record-breaking speed tested positive for cannabis during her 100 meter
U.S. trials in June.
The women's 100 meter event at the Tokyo Olympics starts on July 30, two
days after Richardson’s ban ends but the adverse finding means her
Olympic qualifying results at the trials, which offer automatic places
to the first three qualified athletes in each event, are annulled.
"The rules are the rules and everybody knows what the rules were going
in," Biden said. "Whether they should remain the rules is a different
issue, but the rules are the rules."
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Richardson's suspension provoked bipartisan critiques in Washington.
Democratic Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez called on USADA to
"strike a blow for civil liberties" by overturning the suspension.
"Let her compete, I’m pretty damn sure weed has never made anyone
faster," Donald Trump, Jr., the former Republican president's son, said
on Twitter.
Cannabis is on the list of substances banned by the World Anti-Doping
Agency. USADA said it reduced the typical three-month ban to one month
because Richardson used cannabis outside of competition and she had
successfully completed a counseling program.
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Sha'Carri Richardson of the U.S. on her way to win the 200m Women
REUTERS/David W Cerny/File Photo
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Richardson told NBC's Today Show on Friday that the
episode came as she was coping with her mother's death.
"This incident was about marijuana, so after my sanction is up I'll
be back and able to compete and every single time I step on the
track I'll be ready for whatever anti-doping agency to come and get
what it is that they need," she said.
Biden said Saturday he was "really proud of the way she responded."
(Reporting by Brad Heath and Trevor Hunnicutt; editing by Diane
Craft)
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