Bangkok Post

Nigeria’s Okagbare has her ban extended to 11 years

-

MONACO: Sprinter Blessing Okagbare has been given an additional one-year ban for doping violations on top of her existing 10-year suspension, a decision that rules Nigeria out of the sprint relay at the world championsh­ips.

The Athletics Integrity Unit charged the 33-year-old with “evading sample collection, and tampering or attempted tampering with the doping control process”.

In February, Okagbare was given her original ban for “multiple breaches of anti-doping rules”.

She was suspended during last year’s Tokyo Olympics after failing a drug test.

Six days after she had evaded sample collection on June 13, 2021, she competed in the relay event at Nigeria’s Olympic trials, helping her team to qualify for the world championsh­ips.

Those results have now been disqualifi­ed due to Okagbare’s involvemen­t and Nigeria has therefore lost its potential qualificat­ion place in the women’s 4x100m relay at the world championsh­ips in Oregon next month.

“Over the years, we have repeatedly seen how one person’s actions adversely affect teammates who have trained hard and worked honestly for

their results,” AIU head Brett Clothier said in a statement.

“In this instance, Nigeria has lost an important qualificat­ion spot. Those are the rules and we will not compromise on integrity.”

Okagbare, the 2008 Olympic long jump silver medallist, won her 100m heat in Tokyo last year, but she was thrown out of the Games after the AIU said she had tested positive for a human growth hormone following an out-ofcompetit­ion test.

As a result of the case, Texas therapist Eric Lira, who supplied performanc­eenhancing drugs to Okagbare, became the first person charged under a new US anti-doping law.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Nigeria’s Blessing Okagbare at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics.
REUTERS Nigeria’s Blessing Okagbare at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand