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Been suspended by a sporting body (an international governing body, a national federation, or a professional league) for illegal performance-enhancing drug, and/or banned drug, use; Publicly admitted such use; Been found to have taken illegal performance-enhancing drugs by a court of law
Banned substance(s) Reference(s) Javier Cabanas Spain: Swimming Epehedrine [1] Enos Cabell United States: Baseball Cocaine [2] Danny Cadamarteri England: Football (soccer) Ephedrine [3] Cai Huijue China: Swimming Triamterene [4] Valeriu Calancea Romania: Weightlifting Methandienone [5] Michael Callens Belgium: Swimming Cannabis [6] Filippo ...
Swimming Cannabis (self-admitted) [35] Michael Picotte United States: Swimming Refusal to submit to doping test [31] Yuliya Pidlisna Ukraine: Swimming Stanozolol [36] Jorge Piedra United States: Baseball [37] Leonardo Piepoli Italy: Cycling CERA [38] Caroline Pileggi Australia: Weightlifting Refusing a drug test [39] Juan Pineda United States ...
Sports. Weather. 24/7 Help. ... Olympian avoids 4-year doping ban after showing positive test came from dog's medicine. ... even when the amount works out to less than a drop in a swimming pool ...
The international swimming federation says its top administrator has been ordered to testify as a witness in a U.S. criminal investigation into the case of 23 Chinese swimmers who failed doping ...
Swimming [16] Jose Alexis Valida Spain: Volleyball Cocaine [9] Stephen Alfred United States: Cycling (track) 1998 2006 2007 Norandrosterone Testosterone (May), hCG (June) Refusal to submit to doping control 6 months 8 years Life ban [29] [30] [31] Muhammad Al-Ghaferi United Arab Emirates: Swimming Methylhexaneamine [22] Dilsher Ali Pakistan ...
Eleven of 31 swimmers on China’s Olympic roster were controversially cleared after testing positive for performance-enhancing drugs in 2020.
As of 8 August 2016 11,491 athletes [1] were registered to compete at the 2016 Summer Olympics held in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.. All Olympic sports are signed up to the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) code [2] which operates on a strict liability principle, whereby an athlete is strictly liable for any adverse analytical finding from their urine or blood samples. [3]