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The International Athletics Federation (WA), the Doping Organization (AIU) reported the sanction on Tuesday after it suspended the 24-year-old American sprinter’s right to race in advance in June.
Coleman then posted on his Twitter page that he was not home on December 9, 2019, when inspectors visited him, and that was his third omission in a year.
The athlete not only informed his followers of the dry events during the summer, but also gave details and accused the doping inspectors of intentionally setting him up. The galloping said that he was in a shopping center near his apartment when they wanted to do the test at his home and that he would have been available if he had been called on the phone. He indicated that he was willing to give a sample at any time and could prove his claim with invoices and receipts. According to him, it was precisely the purpose of the inspectors to lose the sampling.
AIU said Tuesday that the ban will expire on May 13, 2022; otherwise, an appeal can be filed with the International Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS).
At the 2019 Doha World Championships, a gold medal sprinter in 4×100 meters in addition to 100 meters was also threatened with a ban late last year, but then the three omissions were not within a year, so he could compete. at the World Cup, and another event in December. it has serious consequences. Coleman was previously unavailable on January 16, 2019 and April 26, 2019, and three mistakes within a year constitute a violation of doping rules and can result in a one or two year ban.
Coleman highlighted in his June Twitter post that he has never doped and, if necessary, gives samples even daily until the end of his career from now on to prove his innocence.
(MTI)
(Cover Image: Alexander Hassenstein / Getty Images Hungary)
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