The Citizen (KZN)

Sun questions Wada process

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Montreux – Chinese swimming star Sun Yang (above), facing a ban of up to eight years for missing an out-of-competitio­n test, told the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport (Cas) yesterday that testers were at fault by failing to identify themselves correctly.

Attending a one-day Cas public hearing in person in a bid to clear his name, Sun, accused of using a hammer to smash a vial containing his own blood sample, maintained his innocence and said testers were unprofessi­onal and ignored protocol.

“If they had been profession­al and had shown their identifica­tion, we would not be here today,” Sun said in Chinese, translated by court interprete­rs.

“The officials were not even capable of proving their identity. How could I allow them to take my sample,” said the triple Olympic champion who is a national hero in China.

Sun insisted that documents provided by the testers were invalid.

Sun, winner of 11 world titles, was cleared of wrongdoing in January by Fina, the internatio­nal swimming federation.

The body confirmed that he had used a hammer to smash a vial containing his own blood sample during the testing session in September last year but agreed that testers had failed to produce adequate identifica­tion or follow correct protocol.

The ruling outraged the World Anti-Doping Agency (Wada) who took the matter to Cas demanding a ban of between two and eight years for Sun, who served a doping suspension in 2014, for missing the out-of-competitio­n test.

After being cleared by Fina, Sun was able to compete in the World Championsh­ips in Gwangju, South Korea, in July, where he won two golds but became a focus of protests from rivals.

Australian Mack Horton refused to share the podium with Sun after coming second to him in the 400m freestyle. Horton received an ovation from fellow swimmers at the athletes’ dining hall for his protest.

Yesterday’s court proceeding­s have been moved from the Cas’s headquarte­rs in Lausanne to Montreux to cope with high media interest and will for only the second time in the tribunal’s history be conducted in public.

The first hearing in public, in 1999, also involved Fina, which had found Irish swimmer Michelle Smith de Bruin guilty of doping. Smith requested an open hearing where Cas ruled in favour of Fina. – AFP

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