New Haven Register (New Haven, CT)

Banned sprinter left off USA Olympic team

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Banned sprinter Sha’Carri Richardson was not on the Olympic roster released Tuesday by USA Track and Field, a decision that means the American champion’s positive test for marijuana will cost her a chance at running on the relay team in Tokyo, in addition to her spot in the 100-meter individual race.

Richardson’s positive test nullified her win at Olympic trials in Eugene, Oregon, last month and the spot that went with it in Tokyo in the 100. Her 30day suspension will end before the start of the relays on Aug. 5, which left open the possibilit­y she could win a medal as part of the 4x100 relay team.

But her name was missing from the roster USATF sent out. The federation had two discretion­ary picks beyond the top four finishers in the 100-meter final at trials but chose not to offer a spot to the 21year-old sprinter, who was expected to challenge for Olympic gold.

Asked about how Richardson was taking the news, her agent, Renaldo Nehemiah, responded: “We haven’t spoken about it at all. It was actually not a topic we focused on.”

In a statement, USATF said it was “incredibly sympatheti­c toward Sha’Carri Richardson’s extenuatin­g circumstan­ces” and “fully agrees” that internatio­nal rules regarding marijuana should be reevaluate­d.

“So while our heartfelt understand­ing lies with Sha’Carri, we must also maintain fairness for all of the athletes who attempted to realize their dreams by securing a place on the U.S. Olympic Track & Field Team,” the statement read.

In this case, that meant offering the remaining relay spots to the sixthand seventh-place finishers, each of whom moved up in the pecking order after Richardson’s DQ.

They are English Gardner and Aliea Hobbs.

Richardson tested positive for a chemical found in marijuana after her victory on June 19. She said the stress of her biological mother’s recent death combined with the pressure of preparing for trials led her to use the drug.

“I was definitely triggered and blinded by emotions, blinded by badness, and hurting, and hiding hurt,” she said on NBC’s “Today” show. “I know I can’t hide myself, so in some type of way, I was trying to hide my pain.”

Over the weekend, she sent out a pair of tweets: “All these perfect people that know how to live life, I’m glad I’m not one of them!” and “2022-2025 undefeated!”

Shortly after the 2012 Olympics, internatio­nal regulators loosened restrictio­ns on marijuana use, increasing the threshold for a positive test to a level designed to catch athletes only who were using it in the immediate hours before competitio­n. Potential bans were reduced from two years to as little as the 30-day suspension that Richardson is serving.

But where some profession­al leagues, such as the NFL, NHL and NBA, have greatly reduced enforcemen­t of marijuana rules, with the acknowledg­ment that the drug does not enhance performanc­e, the Olympic world continues to test for and punish use in some circumstan­ces. According to the U.S. AntiDoping Agency, in addition to substances that trigger performanc­e enhancemen­t, the banned list can includes drugs that can pose health risks to athletes or violate the “spirit of sport.”

It’s a stance that has triggered a wide-ranging debate, largely in the realm of social media but also in Washington. Last week, President Joe Biden said that while he was proud of the way Richardson handled her ban, “the rules are the rules.”

“Whether they should remain the rules is a different issue, but the rules are the rules,” Biden said.

 ?? Andy Lyons / Getty Images ?? Banned sprinter Sha’Carri Richardson was not on the Olympic roster released Tuesday by USA Track and Field, a decision that means the American champion’s positive test for marijuana will cost her a chance at running on the relay team in Tokyo, in addition to her spot in the 100-meter individual race.
Andy Lyons / Getty Images Banned sprinter Sha’Carri Richardson was not on the Olympic roster released Tuesday by USA Track and Field, a decision that means the American champion’s positive test for marijuana will cost her a chance at running on the relay team in Tokyo, in addition to her spot in the 100-meter individual race.

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