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Track And Field Organization Tests Old Doping Samples, Suspends 28 Athletes

Competitors race at the IAAF World Athletics Championship held in Osaka in 2007. Athletes' samples that were kept from the event have now been retested, resulting in suspensions, the IAAF says.
Kai Pfaffenbach
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Reuters /Landov
Competitors race at the IAAF World Athletics Championship held in Osaka in 2007. Athletes' samples that were kept from the event have now been retested, resulting in suspensions, the IAAF says.

In track and field, new anti-doping tests of old samples — taken from athletes at the 2005 and 2007 World Championships — have brought a flurry of suspensions. The sport's world governing body says it's punishing 28 athletes over the findings. It did not release any of their names or nationalities.

The International Association of Athletics Federations is calling the suspensions its "latest success," but the organization also says "a large majority" of the 28 athletes have already retired and that others have already faced sanctions.

None of the suspended athletes were scheduled to compete in this year's World Championships in Beijing, the IAAF says.

The samples from the earlier championships held in Helsinki and Osaka had been stored under a revised anti-doping policy that provides for retesting when technology has caught up with substances that athletes use to cheat. The current statute of limitations on doping is 10 years, according to the World Anti-Doping Code.

"In our 10-year partnership with the IAAF, we have been using every scientific advance and legal opportunity at our disposal to catch the cheats," says the head of the Swiss Laboratory for Doping Analyses, Martial Saugy.

The IAAF announced the move a week after European media published documents that suggest profound doping problems in track. Those documents included results of doping tests of some 5,000 athletes — and more than 800 of them, or about 1 in 7, showed results that experts called "highly suggestive of doping," as Eyder wrote for the Two-Way.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Bill Chappell is a writer and editor on the News Desk in the heart of NPR's newsroom in Washington, D.C.