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Christian Coleman: US athlete cleared of doping violation after Usada withdraw whereabouts charge

American is free to compete at the World Championships and next year’s Olympic Games after the first of his three missed drugs tests was backdated to outside the 12-month window

Gene Cherry
Tuesday 03 September 2019 07:37 BST
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Christian Coleman has been tipped as the successor to Usain Bolt
Christian Coleman has been tipped as the successor to Usain Bolt (AP)

World 100 metres favourite Christian Coleman is eligible to compete in this month's World Athletics Championships and the 2020 Olympics after a whereabouts charge against the American sprinter was withdrawn by the US Anti-Doping Agency (Usada) on Monday.

Usada had charged Coleman with three failures to properly file whereabouts information in a 12-month period, a potential anti-doping violation, and the case had been scheduled to go to arbitration on Wednesday.

But Usada, after receiving guidance from the World Anti-Doping Agency (Wada) on how to calculate the 12-month window, withdrew the charge.

"Every athlete is entitled to a presumption of innocence until their case is concluded through the established legal process," Usada CEO Travis Tygart said in a statement.

"This is certainly the case for Mr Coleman, who has been found by Usada not to have committed a whereabouts violation and is fully eligible to compete under the rules."

Usada added that in 2018 and 2019 Coleman has provided his whereabouts information by the start of each quarter and has been tested on 20 separate occasions by the US agency.

Coleman said he now looked forward to representing the United States in the 100m and 200m at the 27 September – 6 October world championships in Doha.

"While this ordeal has been frustrating and I have missed some competitions that I should not have had to miss, I know that I have never taken any banned substances, and that I have never violated any anti-doping rule," the year's fastest man and 2017 world 100m silver medallist said in a statement.

Coleman had been charged because athletes are required to notify anti-doping officials where they can be reached for a certain period daily.

If testers are unable to contact the athlete at the designated location three times within a 12-month period, he is considered to have committed an anti-doping violation and subject to a ban of up to two years.

Coleman had whereabouts failures on 6 June, 2018 and 16 January and 26 April, 2019, Usada said.

However, under International Standard for Testing and Investigations (ISTI) guidelines, the first failure is backdated to the first day of the quarter, which in Coleman's case would have been 1 April, 2018.

Thus his April 2019 failure fell outside the 12-month window and was not considered an anti-doping violation.

Coleman is free to compete in this month's World Athletics Championships and the Olympic Games next year (AFP/Getty)

"Usada has determined that under the applicable rules, and in order to ensure that Coleman is treated consistently with other athletes under the World Anti-Doping Program, Coleman should not be considered to have three whereabouts failures in a 12-month period," the agency said.

"Accordingly, Usada has withdrawn its charge that Coleman committed an anti-doping rule violation."

The case is still subject to appeal by Wada or the International Association of Athletics Federations' (IAAF) Athletics Integrity Unit but that is unlikely.

Reuters

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