Qatar Tribune

Athletes should not ‘minimise’ whereabout­s rule, says Sebastian Coe

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WORLD Athletics chief Sebastian Coe says no athlete should “minimise the importance of the whereabout­s rule” after 100m world champion Christian Coleman missed three doping tests in a 12-month period.

The American sprinter, who was provisiona­lly suspended earlier this month, risks a two-year ban that would rule him out of next year’s Tokyo Olympics.

The 24-year-old said in a statement on Twitter that he was the victim of “a purposeful attempt to get me to miss a test” in December last year.

He said he was out shopping for Christmas presents and had not received a phone call.

The Athletics Integrity Unit (AIU), the anti-doping arm of World Athletics, said “a phone call is discretion­ary and not a mandatory requiremen­t”.

“It’s not really our policy to comment on unresolved cases -- this is now quite properly a matter for the AIU,” Coe told BBC Sport.

But he added it was “not a good story (for athletics)”.

“No athlete should minimise the importance of the whereabout­s rule,” said Coe.

“The whereabout­s rule is to protect the athletes, it’s to protect their reputation­s and it’s to make sure that we move as hard and as fast as we can to drug-free sport.

“It’s one hour a day -- this is not arcane maritime law, this is not complicate­d.

“The vast majority of athletes make sure they don’t miss those tests. They have to take it seriously.”

Coleman, who clocked 9.76sec to win 100m gold in Doha in September 2019 said he had never taken drugs.

 ??  ?? Sebastian Coe
Sebastian Coe

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