...
...
Next Story

IAAF not protective of drug cheats: Sebastian Coe

The IAAF ruling body of athletics is proactive in tackling doping and not protective of drug cheats, according to president Sebastian Coe on Saturday.

Published on: Mar 26, 2016 01:38 PM IST
Advertisement

The IAAF ruling body of athletics is proactive in tackling doping and not protective of drug cheats, according to president Sebastian Coe on Saturday.

IAAF ruling body of athletics is proactive in tackling doping and not protective of drug cheats, according to president Sebastian Coe. (Reuters Photo)
IAAF ruling body of athletics is proactive in tackling doping and not protective of drug cheats, according to president Sebastian Coe. (Reuters Photo)

The sport has been rocked by allegations of corruption and bribery, with fans and sponsors deserting track and field, but the Briton said the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) was at the forefront of catching drug cheats.

“I think the IAAF has been far, far more proactive than it has been protective. If you don’t go fishing you don’t catch fish and there are many sports that have taken that attitude. The IAAF hasn’t actually,” Coe said in a BBC interview to be broadcast on Saturday.

Athletics, the showpiece of the Olympic Games, was stunned last year when Russia was suspended from the sport after a World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) investigation showed a state-sponsored doping programme.

An independent WADA commission also said “corruption was embedded” at the IAAF under former president Lamine Diack who ran a clique that covered up organised doping and blackmailed athletes while senior officials looked the other way.

Senegal’s Diack is under formal investigation in France on suspicion of corruption and money-laundering linked to concealing positive drug tests.

KEY ADVANCES

“But actually if you look at all the key advances that have been made in sport around anti-doping, they’ve more than often been driven by my sport. The athlete biological passport, the out-of-competition random testing.

“We’ve paid a very high price for what has been revealed in the last few years but actually our systems have shown to be pretty robust.”

In 1989, the IAAF and the other Olympic federations signed a joint declaration against doping with a random out-of competition programme being initiated the same year.

The sport’s governing body also introduced biological passports for athletes, that help in the detection of abnormal fluctuations in red blood cell counts, as part of its drug testing regime in 2009.

Coe said the IAAF had to get back the trust of the athletes to attract people into the sport.

“There’s a twin challenge here as well,” he explained.

“If we don’t get the trust of the athletes back, we haven’t got the families, we haven’t got the parents that are feeling comfortable that this is a sport that they are going to devote time and energy and affection to, and then we might as well all go home.”

 
Stay updated with the latest sports news, including latest headlines and updates from the Olympics 2024, where Indian athletes will compete for glory in Paris. Catch all the action from tennis Grand Slam tournaments, follow your favourite football teams and players with the latest match results, and get the latest on international hockey tournaments and series.
Stay updated with the latest sports news, including latest headlines and updates from the Olympics 2024, where Indian athletes will compete for glory in Paris. Catch all the action from tennis Grand Slam tournaments, follow your favourite football teams and players with the latest match results, and get the latest on international hockey tournaments and series.
SHARE THIS ARTICLE ON
Hindustantimes wants to start sending you push notifications. Click allow to subscribe