Dope cheats have no fear when they return after suspension, says AFI vicepresident: Anju
Five years ago, Asian champion quartermiler Nirmala Sheoran was punished with a fouryear ban for failing a dope test and her results from August 2016 to November 2018 were disqualified. That meant that Nirmala would lose the 400m gold which she won at the 2017 Bhubaneswar Asian Championships and Jisna Mathew, who had finished third in that final, should have received a silver medal.
“I have not got the silver medal yet. But after we wrote to the Athletics Federation of India, we got a letter saying that I have been upgraded from bronze to silver,” said Jisna.
The Odisha Government had also presented ₹ 10 lakh to the gold medal winners, ₹ 7.5 lakh for silver and ₹ 5 lakh for bronze at the 2017 Asians held in that State but Jisna has not heard anything about the prizemoney which she was supposed to have got for the silver.
Nirmala, from Haryana, returned to national competition at last year’s Inter
State meet, and last month was handed an eightyear ban for a second doping violation which happened last year. Around the same time, news came in that hammer thrower K.M. Rachna had been banned for 12 years for a second doping offence.
As the Indian track and field season begins in this Paris Olympics year with the 400m Indian Open in Thiruvananthapuram on March 18, a big question keeps popping up... are cheats getting more confident?
“Once they commit a crime, it looks like they have no fear when they do it a second time. Once they are caught, they have to undergo multiple tests before being cleared to compete. So they probably think since they have undergone so many tests, nobody will come to test them again,” said Anju Bobby George, the country’s lone female World Championships medallist, in a chat with The Hindu.
“It’s tough to stop them, but we can try our maximum and if more athletes are testing positive, the others will get scared. We need to find the window when the athletes take these substances and test them rapidly during this period.
“Mostly, athletes take maximum dope during the development period, it could be from October to February. The development months are normally the buildup period, they should do more testing during this period. It will be cleared out in March and from April our competitions start.”
Anju, also the AFI’s senior vicepresident, felt that athletes who finish behind the cheats should get the medals and the other prizes that they missed out on. “Athletes are supposed to lose their medals and other prizes received during the ban period. That is not happening, but we have to initiate action in this regard.”
Former world champion Peter Sidi mentoring a shooters at the Gun For Glory camp in Hyderabad.
The trainees are back at the Gun For Glory (GFG) shooting range on the Central University campus here, run by Olympic medallist Gagan Narang, under the mentorship of former World champion Peter Sidi.
“This camp presents a valuable opportunity for aspiring marksmen to refine their skills under the expert guidance of highperformance rifle foreign coaches and GFG coaches,” Gagan told The Hindu.
“The goal of holding camps in various places and specially Hyderabad and Telangana is to bring the best talent from across the world to give exposure and knowledge to local
shooters under Sidi” he said.
“It is a multi pronged training methodology consisting of sports science, nutrition, strength and conditioning. The best part is it ensures sharing of technical know how with foreign coaches besides competition support and strategic planning,” he said even while thanking Sports Authority of Telangana State for allocating the shooting range.
“The rifle squad is of 15 athletes, five of whom have now represented India and clinched medals. M. Uma Mahesh from Andhra Pradesh, Vedant Waghmare from Maharashtra, Melvina Angeline from Tamil Nadu, Naraen Pranav from Karnataka and Swati Chowdhury from West Bengal have contributed significantly with their international experience.”