Shanghai Daily

Salazar denies abuse, admits to ‘callous’ language

- ATHLETICS

DISGRACED running coach Alberto Salazar denied subjecting former members of his Nike Oregon Project to abuse or gender discrimina­tion on Tuesday but admitted using “callous” language against athletes in the training group.

Salazar, who was banned for four years last month for a range of doping offenses, has faced stinging criticism from several former runners over methods used in his controvers­ial NOP, which has now been disbanded.

Last week, former US runner Mary Cain said she had suffered physical and mental abuse at the training camp as a result of Salazar’s demanding regime.

Cain, a former high school prodigy who was tipped for middle-distance greatness, said she had suffered suicidal thoughts and started cutting herself as life in the training group took its toll.

In an op-ed in the New York Times,

Cain detailed how she had faced pressure to become “thinner and thinner and thinner,” eventually causing her to stop menstruati­ng for three years.

Another former runner, Olympian Amy Begley, said Salazar barred her from the training group in 2011, complainin­g she was “too fat” and “had the biggest butt on the starting line.”

In a statement to The Oregonian daily on Tuesday, Salazar acknowledg­ed using insensitiv­e language but insisted it was part and parcel of life as an elite athlete.

“On occasion, I may have made comments that were callous or insensitiv­e over the course of years of helping my athletes through hard training,” Salazar said. “If any athlete was hurt by any comments that I have made, such an effect was entirely unintended, and I am sorry.

“I do dispute, however, the notion that any athlete suffered any abuse or gender discrimina­tion while at the NOP.”

He said his emphasis on weight was related to “what (an athlete’s) target training weight and performanc­e weight should be to attain peak performanc­e while maintainin­g an overall good well-being.”

“That’s part of elite sport,” Salazar said. “Maybe that needs to change. Indeed, I have always treated men and women similarly in this regard — to treat my female athletes differentl­y I believe would not be in their personal interests or in the interests of promoting their best athletic performanc­e.”

Nike shut down the Oregon Project in October when Salazar was banned for four years for an array of doping offenses that included traffickin­g in testostero­ne, tampering with the doping control process and administer­ing illicit infusions of the fat-burning substance L-carnitine.

Salazar has denied wrongdoing and vowed to appeal the ban.

(AFP)

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