Pubdate: Tue, 02 Feb 1999
Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA)
Copyright: 1999 Mercury Center
Contact:  http://www.sjmercury.com/
Author: Elliott Almond

DATELINE '98: THE YEAR OF DRUGS

Before the Salt Lake City bribery scandal started in November, the
Olympic movement was reeling from an onslaught of drug controversies.
In response, International Olympic Committee leaders scheduled a
worldwide drug conference in Lausanne, Switzerland, today through
Thursday  to consider ways to deal with the escalating problem. Jan.
8: Chinese swimmer Yuan Yuan was arrested at a Sydney airport while
attempting to smuggle 13 vials of a human growth hormone into the
country to take to the world swimming championships in Perth. Her
coach, Zhou Zhewen, admitted planting the banned substance and was
given a 15-year suspension by FINA, swimming's international governing
body.

Jan. 14: Four Chinese swimmers were disqualified from the world
championships after testing positive for the banned diuretic
triamterene, a masking agent, during an out-of-competition test held
before the championships. Masking agents can hide the presence of
illegal drugs in the system.

Feb. 11: Olympic snowboard champion Ross Rebagliati of Whistler,
British Columbia, was stripped of his gold medal in Nagano, Japan,
after testing positive for marijuana. Claiming he inhaled the drug
from second-hand smoke, Rebagliati was reinstated after appealing to
the Court of Arbitration for Sport. The case reveals discrepancies in
drug standards between different sports federations.

April 29: FINA charged Michelle Smith, the Irish triple gold medalist,
with contaminating a urine sample in an out-of-competition test at her
home Jan. 10 by pouring whiskey in it to mask banned drugs. She was
banned for four years but has appealed before the Court of Arbitration
for Sport.

May 8: Swiss cyclist Mauro Gianetti was taken to a hospital during the
Tour of Romandy after suffering from gastroenteritis, later revealed
to be caused by abuse of the experimental drug perfluorocarbon (PFC).

June 7: Swiss triathlete Olivier Bernhard tested positive for the
controversial over-the-counter dietary supplement androstenedione, 
legal in some sports, after winning the Duathlon World Championships
and was suspended for a year by the Swiss federation.

July 8: Belgian masseur Willy Voet of the Swiss Festina cycling team
was arrested on the France/Belgium border carrying 400 vials of
illegal growth hormones, steroids and masking agents. Voet was heading
to Ireland for the start of the 1998 Tour de France, setting off the
biggest drug scandal in cycling history.

July 8: Swimmer Gary Hall Jr., winner of two gold and two silver
medals in the 1996 Olympics, was suspended for six months after
testing positive for marijuana. Hall won a ruling from a Phoenix judge
in  November letting him compete two weeks before the ban ended.

July 15: Bruno Roussel, Festina team director, was arrested during the
Tour de France, and his admission that drugs were supplied to cyclists
under medical supervision led to the disqualification of the Swiss
team two days later.

July 26: Juan Antonio Samaranch, president of the International
Olympic Committee, told a Spanish newspaper that the list of banned
drugs should be reduced and harmless substances should not be prohibited.

July 27: The International Amateur Athletics Federation indefinitely
suspended U.S. sprinter Dennis Mitchell and U.S. shot putter Randy
Barnes for failing out-of-competition drug tests in April. Mitchell
tested positive for an excessive testosterone to epitestosterone ratio
and Barnes for androstenedione. Mitchell won an appeal before USA
Track and Field, saying his results were skewed because he had sex
with his wife and drank six bottles of beer the night before the test.

Aug. 1: Samaranch and Primo Nebiola, IAAF president, called for a
world conference on drugs, acknowledging the growing problem.

Aug. 7: World Cup star Alessandro Del Piero of Italy began legal
action against Roma's coach Zdenek Zeman over allegations that he may
have used performance-enhancing drugs.

Aug. 18: During a trial in Berlin, five former sports officials said
they had systematically administered performance-enhancing drugs to
East German female swimmers, insisting, though, they were unaware of
any damaging side effects.

Aug. 19: Spanish Olympic committee officials called for the
resignation of Prince Alexandre de Merode, IOC medical commission
chief, after he accused the Spanish of being lax on drug use among
athletes.

Sept. 8: Slugger Mark McGwire of the St. Louis Cardinals hit a
record-breaking 62nd home run amid controversy over his use of
androstenedione, which is permitted in baseball. Another supplement
purchased without prescription, creatine, comes under scrutiny.

Sept. 21: Olympic champion Florence Griffith-Joyner died in her sleep
at her Southern California home at 38. An autopsy showed the death to
be from suffocation after an epileptic seizure and not related to
performance-enhancing drugs. But even in death, Griffith-Joyner can't
escape the steroid rumors that haunted her after she set the 100- and
200-meter world records and won three gold medals in 1988.

Sept. 30: Swiss cyclist Alex Zulle was banned for eight months by his
federation for using the illegal hormone erythropoietin (EPO),  which
stimulates the production of red blood cells.

Oct. 2: Twenty-four Italian soccer players were reported to have
elevated levels of red blood cells after news that the Italian
laboratory had tested only a fraction of the 4,000 samples sent there
for analysis. The disclosure resulted in the resignation of Mario
Pescante, the Italian Olympic Committee president, and the lab lost
its IOC accreditation.

Oct. 7: Three-time Boston Marathon winner Uta Pippig of Germany was
suspended by the German Athletic Federation after testing positive for
high levels of testosterone in April.

Dec. 23: The International Tennis Federation announced Petr Korda of
the Czech Republic tested positive for anabolic steroids at Wimbledon.
Korda was forced to forfeit $94,529 in prize money. But an ITA appeals
committee didn't sentence the player to a one-year mandatory ban
because officials believed he did not knowingly take the drug.
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