Hindustan Times (Jammu)

Kamalpreet faces 4-year ban after failing dope test

- Avishek Roy avishek.roy@htlive.com

NEW DELHI: India’s top woman discus thrower Kamalpreet Kaur, who finished sixth at the Tokyo Olympics in August 2021, has tested positive for a prohibited substance in a test conducted by the Athletics Integrity Unit (AIU), the body announced on Wednesday. Kaur, 26, has been handed a provisiona­l suspension after testing positive for the banned anabolic steroid Stanozolol, AIU said on its website. AIU is an independen­t body of World Athletics that deals with integrity issues.

The athlete from Punjab will remain suspended while seeking the testing of her B sample and a further hearing. Kaur can also accept the initial finding from the A sample testing and waive the second test and further proceeding­s. If found guilty, she faces a ban of up to four years. Kaur is in the World Athletics Registered Testing Pool (RTP) programme for 2022.

The AIU announceme­nt comes following days of intense speculatio­n that the thrower has failed a dope test. She had denied the initial reports and the Athletics Federation of India (AFI) had not commented on the issue.

Kaur’s doping case is one of the biggest in Indian athletics and could not have come at a worse time. There is less than three months to go for the world athletics championsh­ips in Eugene, Oregon and the big year of competitio­ns includes the Commonweal­th Games and the Asian Games.

AIU posted Kamalpreet’s case on its website and tweeted: “The AIU has provisiona­lly suspended discus thrower Kamalpreet Kaur of India for the presence/use of a prohibited substance (Stanozolol), a breach of the @World Athletics anti-doping rules.” AIU website mentions the date as March 29.

Stanozolol is a synthetic steroid derived from testostero­ne and has anabolic and androgenic properties. The drug achieved notoriety at the 1988 Seoul Olympics after Canadian sprinter Ben Johnson tested positive and was stripped of his 100m gold.

A provisiona­l suspension is mandatory under the World Athletics Anti-Doping Rules “following an adverse analytical finding for any non-specified substance on the prohibited list.”

Kaur participat­ed in only one competitio­n this year, the Indian Grand Prix in Thiruvanan­thapuram on March 23, where she threw a distance of 61.39m. Her national record of 66.59m was achieved last year. Kaur skipped the Federation Cup in Kozhikode last month citing a knee injury and was kept out of the ongoing national camp.

An AFI source said Kaur had failed an out-of-competitio­n test conducted in March end.

Indian discus throwers have been under the scanner for years. Seema Antil-Punia had failed a dope test after winning the junior world gold.

Chief national athletics coach, Radhakrish­nan Nair, was surprised by Kaur’s positive test. “I am shocked and disappoint­ed. This is sad news,” he said. “We expected great things from her. We were expecting her to win gold at the CWG and Asian Games and make a mark at the worlds. She opted out of the national camp. She told us there was some issue with her knee and she wanted to get a surgery done. We (AFI) didn’t want to block a spot for another athlete, so we granted her permission to skip the camp.”

Kaur was hailed as a great talent after the athlete from a rural background rose rapidly in the last two seasons. She rose in standing last year after becoming the first Indian women discus thrower to cross 65m. She broke her national record twice last year and qualified for the Olympics. In Tokyo, she threw 64m in qualificat­ion, finishing second, and threw 63.70m in the final to finish sixth. She had erased the national record in March last year in a domestic meet in Patiala, throwing 65.06m, improving it to 66.59m in June.

Indian athletics had hit an alltime high at Tokyo after Neeraj Chopra won the javelin gold, becoming the country’s first Olympic medallist in athletics.

 ?? AFP FILE ?? Kamalpreet Kaur.
AFP FILE Kamalpreet Kaur.

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