Jamaica Gleaner

Gatlin defends competing in Rio

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RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil (AP): IT DIDN’T take long for Justin Gatlin’s name to get dragged into the doping drama swirling at the Olympics. No big deal to Gatlin. The sprinter considered the best threat to stopping Usain Bolt in the 100-metre final on Sunday told the Associated Press that he’s not paying attention to what people are saying about him and is not concerned with those who think he doesn’t belong there.

“At the end of the day, the time has been served. I’ve served that time,” the 34-yearold Gatlin told AP yesterday. “I’ve dealt with that punishment. I’ve moved forward.” Not everyone else has. Gatlin, who won gold at 100 metres at the 2004 Olympics, had been caught using banned substances twice. The first was for amphetamin­es, though arbitrator­s determined that he did not use them for doping, but to treat attention deficit disorder. The second came for excessive testostero­ne in 2006 and resulted in a four-year ban.

His name almost always comes up in the debate over how past dopers should be treated.

In Rio, it surfaced in the wake of American swimmer Lilly King’s finger-wagging display toward Yulia Efimova, the Russian who was allowed to compete after a last-minute appeal to the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport.

Like Gatlin, Efimova has served a doping ban, but was reinstated.

But in refusing to bar the entire Russian team from the Olympics after investigat­ions detailed state-sponsored doping in the country, the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee put in a special caveat: Any Russian who had been previously banned for doping was not welcome.

NO DOUBLE PUNISHMENT

That rule was overturned by the Court of Arbritrati­on for Sport, which had made similar decisions in previous cases, saying athletes can’t be punished twice for the same offence.

King’s criticism of Efimova – and her icy stares toward the Russian before the two squared off in the pool – instantly made King a voice in support of clean athletes everywhere.

The dispute led to King, and many others, being asked if it was fair that Gatlin was competing.

“Do I think people who have been caught doping should be on the team? They shouldn’t. It is unfortunat­e we have to see that,” King said. But King said she had to respect the rules. Same with sprinter Michael Johnson, the four-time Olympic gold medallist, who was Justin Gatlin celebrates his win in the men’s 200-metre run at the US Olympic track and field trials in Eugene, Oregon.

asked whether Gatlin should be here.

“The issue people need to understand is that you’re not going to solve the problem by pointing the finger at an athlete and making that athlete the villain,” Johnson said, talking in general about athletes with violations.

“The athlete has been a villain and certainly has done damage to the sport . ... I don’t appreciate that. But the athlete’s not the one that’s making the rules that allows him to get back on the track or back in the pool, or back on the field.”

Gatlin does not see himself as a villain — and does not buy into the now-hackneyed portrayal of him vs Bolt as track’s version of ‘good vs evil’.

“People want to label people, and that’s all they want to do,” Gatlin said. “They don’t want to get to know them, they don’t want to understand the story in depth.”

Though many of the headlines deride him, Gatlin insists that he’s popular in the Athletes’ Village.

“So many people have come up to me in the village and the cafeteria, showing me love, wanting me to go out there and do the best, be the best,” he said. “Taking pictures and everything. I get love, man.”

How will the fans — and media — react when he hits the track Saturday for the start of the men’s 100? He’s not concerned. “I’ve worked hard, all the way from the bottom when I had nothing,” Gatlin said. “I worked hard to work back to where I’m at now. I don’t understand. The system has worked. I think people need to stop looking at trying to be the judge, the jury and executione­r and let the system do its job.”

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AP

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