The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Bolt stripped of gold from 2008 Olympics

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Usain Bolt lost one of his gold medals after Nesta Carter, Bolt’s teammate on the 4x100 relay team, tested positive for a banned stimulant in reanalysis of samples from the 2008 Beijing Olympics.

GENEVA >> Usain Bolt has lost one of his nine Olympic gold medals because of a doping case involving Jamaican teammate Nesta Carter.

The IOC said Wednesday that Carter tested positive for methylhexa­neamine, a banned stimulant, in reanalysis of samples from the 2008 Beijing Olympics.

Olympic rules state that the entire relay team can be disqualifi­ed and stripped of medals if one runner fails a doping test.

Carter and Bolt were teammates on the winning 4x100-meter team, which set a world record of 37.10 seconds. Carter ran the opening leg, and Bolt took the baton third in a team that also included Michael Frater and Asafa Powell.

“The Jamaican team is disqualifi­ed,” the IOC said in a statement. “... the correspond­ing medals, medalist pins and diplomas are withdrawn and shall be returned.”

The relay title in Beijing completed the first of Bolt’s gold medal sweeps in the 100, 200 and relay at three straight Olympics.

Bolt set world record times for all three sprint titles at the Bird’s Nest, establishi­ng himself as the defining superstar of Olympic track.

“I want to share it with my team,” said Bolt said after completing his hat trick in 2008. “It’s down to them that I beat the world record today. When you beat the relay world record, you feel four times happier.”

Bolt and Carter will retain their gold medals from Jamaica’s relay win at the 2012 London Olympics — in a record time of 36.84 seconds that stands today. Bolt ran the final leg on that team. He took the baton from Yohan Blake, who served a ban in 2009 for ingesting the same substance as Carter.

Carter and Bolt also helped lower their relay world record between the Olympic titles, taking gold at the 2011 world championsh­ips in Daegu, South Korea, in 37.04.

The 31-year-old Carter has teamed with Bolt on three straight world championsh­ip relay-winning teams, from 2011 through 2015. He also took an individual bronze in the 100 in 2013 in Moscow, behind Bolt and Justin Gatlin of the United States.

Carter, who did not compete at the Rio de Janeiro Olympics, faces a ban from the IAAF.

Trinidad and Tobago is in line to get the gold medal from 2008, Japan could be upgraded to silver, and fourth-place finisher Brazil could get the bronze medal.

Carter testified by videoconfe­rence to an IOC disciplina­ry hearing held in Lausanne on Oct. 17.

The IOC’s ruling states that Carter noted he was taking supplement­s in 2008 “advised in this respect by his coach, Mr. Stephen Francis.”

“The athlete explained that he had given several samples for doping controls whilst he was taking Cell Tech and Nitro Tech before the 2008 Olympic Games and he had never tested positive for a prohibited substance,” the detailed verdict stated.

“He therefore did not believe that these supplement­s could contain prohibited substances. He did not understand how methylhexa­neamine could have been found in 2016.”

Though methylhexa­neamine was not specifical­ly named on the 2008 list of prohibited substances, it “fell within the scope of the general prohibitio­n of stimulants having a similar chemical structure or similar biological effect as the listed stimulants,” the judging panel of three IOC members wrote.

The panel doubted if the supplement­s identified had caused the positive test given that Carter “used such supplement­s regularly and that this did not lead to other problems.”

The runner cast doubt on his own ability to avoid doping rule violations. In a written statement to the IOC, “(Carter) asserted that he did not remember having received any formal anti-doping training in his career.”

Carter can appeal the sanction to the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport. However, the IOC panel already anticipate­d one challenge in its written verdict.

“The Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport (“CAS”) has confirmed that the presence or use of substances falling within the scope of generic definition­s of the prohibited list, can be used as a basis of establishi­ng anti-doping rules violations,” the verdict said.

In a separate ruling Wednesday, another former Olympic champion was stripped of two silver medals from the Beijing Games.

The IOC said Russian athlete Tatiana Lebedeva tested positive for the anabolic steroid turinabol in retests, and would be disqualifi­ed from her runner-up placings in the long jump and triple jump.

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 ?? AP PHOTO/ANJA NIEDRINGHA­US, FILE ?? In this Aug. 22, 2008 photo, members of Jamaica’s gold medal winning relay team Nesta Carter and Usain Bolt, right, celebrate after the men’s 4x100-meter relay final at the Beijing 2008 Olympics. Bolt has been stripped of one of his nine Olympic gold...
AP PHOTO/ANJA NIEDRINGHA­US, FILE In this Aug. 22, 2008 photo, members of Jamaica’s gold medal winning relay team Nesta Carter and Usain Bolt, right, celebrate after the men’s 4x100-meter relay final at the Beijing 2008 Olympics. Bolt has been stripped of one of his nine Olympic gold...

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