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Salazar’s four-year ban upheld by CAS - reports

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(BBC) Banned athletics coach Alberto Salazar’s four-year suspension has been upheld by the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport (Cas).

The 63-year-old was banned two years ago for a series of doping violations by the US AntiDoping Agency (Usada) but appealed against the decision.

Salazar ran the Nike Oregon Project (NOP), based in Beaverton, Oregon.

It was establishe­d in 2001 and was the home of British fourtime Olympic champion Mo Farah.

Farah has not been accused of doping, and left the Oregon Project in 2017.

A BBC Panorama programme in 2015 focusing on Salazar and the NOP prompted a four-year investigat­ion by Usada and a two-year court battle behind closed doors. It eventually resulted in bans for both Salazar and Nike endocrinol­ogist Dr Jeffrey Brown, announced in October 2019.

The appeals of Salazar and Brown, who was also banned for four years, were heard virtually over seven days in March earlier this year.

A full report by Cas, which has upheld both bans, is due to be published within days.

The investigat­ion into Salazar began after a BBC Panorama programme in 2015.

UK Athletics (UKA), the sport’s UK governing body, conducted its own review into the claims, and gave Farah the green light to continue working with Cuban-born Salazar.

Doping charges against

Salazar and Dr Brown were brought by Usada in June 2017. The pair contested the charges, supported by Nike-paid lawyers, and the case went to the American Arbitratio­n Associatio­n.

Farah announced he was leaving Salazar in October 2017, the same year he was knighted, but denied his decision was to do with the doping claims.

During his time at the NOP, 5,000m and 10,000m runner

Farah won six world titles and four Olympic gold medals.

An independen­t panel found Salazar and Brown possessed and trafficked a banned performanc­e-enhancing substance and administer­ed or attempted to administer a prohibited method to multiple track and field athletes.

It added that Salazar “tampered and/or attempted to tamper with the doping control process”.

The panel also said Salazar

and Brown “communicat­ed repeatedly” about the athletes of the NOP performanc­e and medical conditions, exchanging informatio­n without any apparent formal authorisat­ion by the athletes at the NOP or distinctio­n between Dr Brown’s role as an athlete’s physician and NOP consultant.

Usada chief executive Travis Tygart praised athletes for having the “courage to speak out and ultimately expose the truth”.

 ??  ?? Salazar (centre) celebrates with Galen Rupp (left) and Mo Farah (right) at the London 2012 Olympics.
Salazar (centre) celebrates with Galen Rupp (left) and Mo Farah (right) at the London 2012 Olympics.

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