Gatlin deserves a chance

12 Oct, 2014 - 09:10 0 Views

The Sunday Mail

SPRINTER Justin Gatlin has a right to earn “redemption”, says the man who led the Lance Armstrong investigation.

Travis Tygart, chief executive of the United States Anti-Doping Agency, believes athletes who are banned for doping offences deserve another chance.

Gatlin, who has served two drug bans, is the world’s fastest man in 2014.

“If somebody commits a violation, serves a ban and comes back to the sport, part of the rule is this idea of redemption,” Tygart told BBC Sport.

Gatlin has been a controversial figure since returning from his second ban in 2011, but his stunning times this year have provoked fury from many fans and rivals. He ran the fastest 100m and 200m by a man in his 30s this summer.

This anger has only increased since research from Oslo University suggested athletes could benefit from steroids for years after they stopped taking them.

“There is some recent science on the effect of steroids on mice, but there is no proof yet it translates to humans,” said Tygart, who in 2012 declared the “conclusive and undeniable proof” that American cyclist Armstrong was a drug cheat who was at the heart of a team-run doping conspiracy.

“We’ve looked at it and you have to be cautious about changing the goalposts in the middle of the game based on a few sound-bites in the Press from one paper on mice. That’s not fair. What’s fair, and what athletes and the public rely on, is a set of rules that are enforced evenly.”

For an athlete who commits a doping offence, Tygart acknowledges that “there is always a cloud that follows that person, but that’s not a question for the rules, that’s people’s opinions”.

Earlier this week, Lord Coe, the man likely to be the next president of the International Association of Athletics Federations, said he had a “big problem” with Gatlin, and told reporters he believed dopers enjoyed the benefits of their cheating long after their bans were over.

But Tygart told the BBC the Oslo study was not the first to show a long-term effect from steroids in mice, and that nobody had been able to demonstrate that the same applied for humans. — BBC Sport.

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