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WADA not to appeal Gay's one-year ban

Last Updated 04 June 2014, 17:57 IST

The World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) will not appeal banned American sprinter Tyson Gay's controversial one-year doping ban, it said on Tuesday.

The global agency said the ban, which has been widely criticised in Europe as too lenient, was "compatible with the World Anti-Doping Code."

Gay, the world's joint second fastest man, last month had accepted the one-year suspension by the US Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) after a 2013 positive test for an anabolic steroid.

The ban was backdated to June 23, 2013, making the US 100 metres record holder eligible to return to running later this month. His first race will be a 100 metres at Lausanne's Diamond League meeting on July 3, organisers said on Monday.

Normally athletes receive a two-year suspension for their first major doping offense but under anti-doping rules the ban can be reduced for substantial cooperation. The US agency said Gay was eligible for such a reduction because the sprinter offered what it termed substantial assistance in his case.

On Tuesday, WADA said it was satisfied with the decision.

"After careful review and scrutiny of the full case file, WADA is satisfied that Mr Tyson Gay provided substantial assistance to USADA in an appropriate fashion," the global agency said in a statement to Reuters. "WADA will therefore not appeal USADA's decision which is compatible with the World Anti-Doping Code." Officials of the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF), which also can appeal the US decision, declined comment, saying the matter remains in the hands of its doping review board to assess. In addition to the ban, Gay has returned the silver medal he won as a member of the US 4x100 metres relay team at the 2012 London Olympics.

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(Published 04 June 2014, 17:57 IST)

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