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American cyclists arrive in black masks
BEIJING (Reuters) - Unidentified members of the U.S. cycling squad arrived at Beijing airport wearing black respiratory masks, a U.S. Olympic committee spokesman said on Tuesday.
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One woman wearing a mask which covered the nose and mouth was in what appeared to be an American team T-shirt, photographs showed. A male wore a white T-shirt with BEIJING in black letters across the chest.
"I suspect it was their choice, you would have to talk to them as to what prompted them to do this. I will say this, I am not a scientist, but in my view that was unnecessary," said Darryl Seibel, chief communications officer of the U.S. Olympic Committee.
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I will say this, I am not a scientist, but in my view that was unnecessary
Hopefully future athletes learn from these past mistakes but I don't hold any hope for that. It's amazing how often track athletes get caught (worldwide, not just in the US) because they know how often they are tested for doping and how severe the consequences are.IOC strips gold from 2000 US relay team
By STEPHEN WILSON, AP Sports Writer
Sat Aug 2, 9:43 AM ET
BEIJING - The International Olympic Committee stripped gold medals Saturday from the U.S. men's 1,600-meter relay team that competed at the 2000 Olympics in the aftermath of Antonio Pettigrew's admission that he was doping at the time.
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The IOC executive board disqualified the entire team, the fourth gold and sixth overall medal stripped from that U.S. track contingent in the past eight months for doping.
Three gold and two bronze were previously removed after Marion Jones confessed to using performance-enhancing drugs.
Saturday's decision was almost a formality after Pettigrew gave up his gold medal in June. During a trial involving former track coach Trevor Graham, he admitted in May that he used EPO and human growth hormone from 1997 to 2003.
Five of Pettigrew's teammates also lose their medals: Michael Johnson and twins Alvin and Calvin Harrison ran in the final; Jerome Young and Angelo Taylor ran in the preliminaries.
It was Johnson's fifth gold medal of his stellar career. He has already said he was giving it back because he felt "cheated, betrayed and let down" by Pettigrew's testimony. Johnson still holds world records in the 200 and 400 meters.
Three of the four runners from the relay final have been tainted by drugs.
Alvin Harrison accepted a four-year ban in 2004 after admitting he used performance-enhancers. Calvin Harrison tested positive for a banned stimulant in 2003 and was suspended for two years. Young was banned for life for doping violations.
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Hopefully future athletes learn from these past mistakes but I don't hold any hope for that. It's amazing how often track athletes get caught (worldwide, not just in the US) because they know how often they are tested for doping and how severe the consequences are.
Depending on what your definition of bad is... if you are competing in a sport that you love and use a banned substance to gain a competitive advantage a 2-year or lifetime ban could be personally devastating. That is the question anyone who uses a banned substance has to tackle: is it worth the risk? Unfortunately there are those that say it is worth that risk.Oh8ch;1223009; said:But how bad ARE the consequences, really?
This specific incident was seemingly based on admission alone but I can't help but wonder what brought this out. Usually an admission comes about as a reaction to testing threats or after a positive test has been given but in this case the article does not mention either of those situations.As I understand this incident without the admission there is no penalty. Testing was common long before 2000. We have no idea how many athletes win with drugs and are never identified. If you can run clean and miss the games or run juiced and garner international acclaim and more than a little bit of cash perhaps the risk/reward equation looks pretty favorable.
Not necessarily... Do you think Lance Armstrong was doping during any of his 7 Tour de France wins? Do you think Michael Johnson was doping in when he set his world records? (Not necessarily asking you Oh8ch... more of a rhetorical question) I'd take a physical specimen like those who have tested negative time and time again over anyone who may get a temporary boost by doping. I guess I'm forever the optimist that we'll see less and less doping in Olympic sports and will give the benefit of the doubt to the athlete unless they test positive/admit to doping... but I'm also a realist that this is an issue that will never go away.So long as the advantage gained is sufficient, those who cheat will out perform those who do not (cheaters really do prosper) and will rise to the top. So maybe some folks are getting the message - but the result is they aren't in Beijing.
Former 'Lost Boy' to lead U.S. Olympians in Beijing
- U.S. team picks runner Lopez Lomong to carry flag at Olympics opening ceremony
- Lomong fled home in Sudan at age 6, became separated from his family
- As one of the "Lost Boys of Sudan," he grew up in U.S., became U.S. citizen
- China criticized for not doing enough to end violence in Sudan
Lopez Lomong competes during Olympic trials in Eugene, Oregon, last month.
BEIJING, China (CNN) -- A U.S. athlete who overcame the chaos of war in Sudan to become a middle-distance runner in the United States will carry the American flag during Friday's opening ceremony of the 2008 Summer Games.
Lopez Lomong, a 23-year-old competitor in the 1,500-meter race, will lead the U.S. Olympic team as the flagbearer.
Teammates chose him Wednesday, the U.S. Olympic Committee (USOC) said in a statement.
Lomong is a member of Team Darfur, a group of athletes committed to raising awareness about chronic violence in the Darfur region of western Sudan.
He was among roughly 3,800 refugees, dubbed the Lost Boys of Sudan by reporters and aid workers, who were resettled in cities around the United States.
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Meet Team USA: Get to know the nearly 600 Olympians in Beijing
Story Highlights
- America's new set of Olympians in Beijing are from 47 of the 50 U.S. states
- There are soldiers, a cancer patient and the daughter of a Super Bowl champion
- See who's the shortest, tallest and who's a descendant of a former U.S. president
Pole vaulter Jenn Stuczynski and 400-meter specialist LaShawn Merritt
Michael O'Neill/SI
The U.S. has sent nearly 600 athletes to Beijing for the Olympic Games. But who are they? America's new set of Olympians are from 47 of the 50 states -- as well as athletes who were born in 28 other countries -- and includes identical twins, teenagers, a cancer patient and the daughter of a Super Bowl champion. Who's from the smallest hometown? Which team is the brainest? Which college is represented by the most Olympians? Get to know a little more about Team USA.
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BRAINIEST TEAM
Fencing. Jason Rogers was a finalest for a Rhodes Scholarship. Emily Cross won the world junior title in foil in '05 and then passed up senior worlds to finish her sophomore year at Harvard. Sada Jacobson has a history degree from Yale. Tim Morehouse is a Brandeis grad and former teacher. It's no wonder the siblings on the team, who work in finance in New York City, are named Keeth and Erinn Smart.
Citizen lame: Olympic carpetbagging amounts to athletic treason
Aug. 7, 2008
By Gregg Doyel
CBSSports.com National Columnist
He'll be wearing the red, white and blue of the United States in Beijing, and any Olympic medal he wins in the 1,500 meters or 5,000 meters will go toward the U.S. medal count, but he doesn't represent me. I don't want his stinking medals. Bernard Lagat is a terrific runner and he might even be a terrific human being, but he's from Kenya, which means he's Kenyan. Not American.
Jingoistic? Me? Hardly. Patriotic? Damn right. And maybe a little bit old-fashioned. Not so long ago, Americans represented America, and Kenyans represented Kenya, and Russians represented Russia, and so on and so forth. And it was beautiful. The Olympics were beautiful.
Graphic of the Day: Foreign-born athletes playing for the U.S. Olympic team
Aug. 7, 2008
By Roland Liwag
CBSSports.com Staff Writer
For every American-born athlete like Chris Kaman and Becky Hammon, who are playing for Germany and Russia, there are Olympians like Steffen Peters and Nastia Liukin competing for the Stars and Stripes.
Peters (equestrian) was born in Germany and became a naturalized U.S. citizen in 1992. Liukin (gymnastics) was born in Moscow to two former Soviet champion gymnasts.
Khatuna Lorig (archery) was originally from the Republic of Georgia (as in former Soviet state Georgia, not Peach State Georgia) and gained her U.S. citizenship last year.
Freddy Adu (men's soccer) was born in Tema, Ghana and emigrated to Potomac, Md., in 1997 after his parents won an immigration lottery.
Howard Bach (badminton) was born in Vietnam in 1979 and moved to the U.S. at age 3.
Giuseppe Lanzone (rowing) grew up in the "five block by 10 block" town of La Punta in Peru. His family moved to the U.S. in 1997 and he became a citizen in 2006.
So are these athletes traitors? Hardly.
To me, these aren't the stories of traitors, but of Americans with an overseas heritage.
And yes, these athletes do represent me.