Business Day

Suspicion greets Ye’s Olympic record

- TALEK HARRIS London

A TOP US coach called China’s Ye Shiwen “suspicious” and compared her to East Germany’s drug-addled athletes after her super-fast times were questioned at the London Olympics.

John Leonard, executive director of the World Swimming Coaches Associatio­n, told The Guardian newspaper the 16-yearold’s lightning freestyle leg in her world-record 400m individual medley was simply “impossible”.

The schoolgirl timed 58.68 seconds in the last 100m, a whisker off US winner Ryan Lochte’s time in the men’s competitio­n.

Astonishin­gly, her final lap was quicker than the American champion’s, who won the equivalent men’s event in the second-best time in history.

“The one thing I will say is that history in our sport will tell you that every time we see something, and I will put quotation marks around this, ‘unbelievab­le’, history shows us that it turns out later on there was doping involved,” Leonard said.

“That last 100m was reminiscen­t of some old East German swimmers, for people who have been around a while. It was reminiscen­t of the 400m individual medley by a young Irish woman in Atlanta.”

Leonard was referring to Michelle de Bruin, who emerged as a triple gold-medallist at the 1996 Games but was banned for four years in 1998 for tampering with a urine sample.

“Any time someone has looked like Superwoman in the history of our sport they have later been found guilty of doping,” he said.

“I have been around swimming for four-and-a-half decades now. If you have been around swimming you know when something has been done that just isn’t right. I have heard commentato­rs saying ‘well, she is 16, and at that age amazing things happen’.

“Well, yes, but not that amazing. I am sorry.”

Ye, whose gold medal swim was described as “insane” by former record-holder Stephanie Rice, has denied foul play. Late on Monday, she set the world’s fastest time in the 200m individual medley semifinals. “There is no problem with doping, the Chinese team has a firm policy, so there is no problem with that,” she said.

Ye won the 200m medley at the world championsh­ips last year, but her 400m medley swim shaved seven seconds off her time at that meeting. Leonard admitted such an improvemen­t was possible at her age.

“But the final 100m was impossible. Flat out. If all her split times had been faster I don’t think anybody would be calling it into question, because she is a good swimmer,” he said.

“But to swim three other splits at the rate that she did, which was quite ordinary for elite competitio­n, and then unleash a historic anomaly, it is just not right.

“No coach that I spoke to yesterday could ever recall seeing anything remotely like that in a world-level competitio­n, where someone could out-split one of the fastest male swimmers in the world, and beat the woman ahead of her by three-and-a-half body lengths. All those things, I think, legitimate­ly call that swim into question.”

Leonard is the first coach to speak out about Ye. British media have also pounced on her performanc­es, pointing to China’s record of state-sponsored doping in the 1980s and 1990s.

“Ye’s amazing time for freestyle leg scarcely credible,” read a headline in The Times, which noted that she was a former team-mate of Chinese swimmer Li Zhesi, who was barred from the Olympics over blood-booster EPO (erythropoi­etin).

“Chinese swimming has such a shameful history of doping that any remarkable achievemen­t by one of its athletes is inevitably met with cynicism,” said the Daily Telegraph. But Arne Ljungqvist, medical commission chief for the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee, called the speculatio­n “sad”.

“For me, it is very sad that an unexpected performanc­e is surrounded by suspicions,” he told a briefing. “I mean, to raise suspicion immediatel­y when you see an extraordin­ary performanc­e — to me it is against the fascinatio­n of sport.”

And Frank Busch, national team director for USA Swimming, compared Ye to Jamaica’s Usain Bolt, who surprised the world by winning three track sprint titles in world record times at Beijing.

“I don’t know what the Chinese are doing. But I don’t think anybody saw Bolt running that fast in 2008. There are times you have phenomenon­s coming up that surprise you with what they can do,” he told the New York Times.

China, who had only won one swimming gold in Beijing, took two on the first two days in London through Ye and men’s 400m freestyle winner Sun Yang.

Meanwhile, the Chinese swimming team has vehemently rejected suggestion­s of doping. Team head Xu Qi, told the news agency Xinhua: “Ye Shiwen has been seen as a genius since she was young, and her performanc­e vindicates that … If there are suspicions, then please lay them out using facts and data.”

China briefly dominated women’s swimming in the 1990s but that ended as fast as it began after a series of doping scandals.

Australia’s Ian Thorpe, winner of five Olympic swimming golds, warned against rushing to judgment. “Young swimmers can take off chunks of time that other swimmers can’t,” he said.

The chairman of the British Olympic Associatio­n, Colin Moynihan, said the World AntiDoping Agency’s (Wada’s) checks were extremely thorough.

“She’s been through Wada’s programme and she’s clean,” Mr Moynihan said.

“That’s the end of the story. Ye Shiwen deserves recognitio­n for her talent.” Sapa-AFP, Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa