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Shorts: Sun ban a 'statement to the world'; Nike shoe debate rages

Last updated on: February 29, 2020 17:11 IST

Mack Horton

IMAGE: Gold medallist Sun Yang of China, and bronze medallist Gabriele Detti of Italy celebrate as silver medallist Mack Horton of Australia protests on the podium after the men's 400m freestyle medal ceremony at the 2019 FINA World Swimming Championships at the Nambu University Municipal Aquatics Center, Gwangju, South Korea. Photograph: Kim Hong-Ji/Reuters

Mack Horton says the eight-year doping ban handed out to his rival Sun Yang, who the Australian swimmer once famously described as a 'drug cheat', was a statement to the world about clean sport.

 

Barring a successful appeal, multiple Olympic and world champion Sun’s competitive career was brought to an end by Friday’s decision at the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS).

After publicly calling him a cheat at the Rio Olympics, Horton had refused to shake Sun’s hand or join him on the podium after taking silver behind his Chinese rival in the 400 metres freestyle at last year’s world championships in South Korea.

“I think, regardless of the outcome, it was always going to be a statement to the world and my stance has always been about clean sport never about nations or individuals,” Horton told Australia’s Seven News as he headed to training on Saturday.

“I’m just a guy still chasing the dream so, you know, we’ve got a job to do this morning and we’ll just keep going.”

Fulfilling that dream of winning Olympic gold in the 400m freestyle in Tokyo later this year will be considerably easier for Horton after Sun’s ban.

CAS had accepted an appeal from the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) against a decision by swimming body FINA to clear Sun of wrongdoing for smashing vials containing blood samples during an out-of-competition test in 2018. Sun, 28, said through China’s state news agency Xinhua that he would appeal the ban in the Swiss Federal Supreme Court.

While Horton was already experiencing the start of a backlash from angry Sun fans on social media, some of his fellow swimmers welcomed the ban.

South African butterfly specialist Chad Le Clos, who finished second behind Sun in the 200m freestyle at the Rio Games, said it should not be forgotten that cheating had an impact on other athletes.

“Like many other clean swimmers, I have raced against Sun Yang and ‘lost’,” he posted on Twitter.

“Drug cheats have no place in sport and we need the governing bodies to reconsider the damage he has done to our great sport - and to the results / careers of many other clean swimmers.”

Sun, whose punishment was so severe because he had served a previous ban for the use of a banned substance in 2014, will keep his many medals because the tests before and after his latest infraction were negative, CAS said.

British Olympic and world 100m breaststroke champion Adam Peaty said the decision was 'very good'.

“For anyone that’s been banned once, potentially it’s a mistake. The odds are yeah – you could have taken any supplement or whatever,” he told Swimming World.

“You’re looking at it twice – you’re a fool. I believe that you’re disrespecting the sport, you’re disrespecting yourself and you’re disrespecting your country.”

Nike shoe debate rages as runners weigh advantages at US Olympic trials

Nike Vaporfly shoes

IMAGE: An athlete wearing the Nike Vaporfly shoes. Photograph: Christopher Pike/Reuters

A debate over Nike’s record-breaking distance footwear raged on ahead of Saturday’s U.S. Olympic marathon trials, as the shoe’s buzz-worthy technology continued to raise questions over whether it offered an unfair advantage to runners.

The Nike Vaporfly shoe captured the spotlight in October when Eliud Kipchoge broke the two-hour marathon barrier wearing a pair, and various versions of it have featured in other record-smashing runs since.

“It’s hard to argue that they do not provide an advantage just because of the 500 women who are running, 480 are going to be wearing Vaporflys,” said Kellyn Taylor, a marathoner sponsored by HOKA ONE ONE who is seen as a top contender in the women’s field.

“Technology is important. I think that it should always be advancing, but I do think there’s a cap on it,” said Taylor, who came sixth in the 2016 trials. “I think the question is, ‘Have we reached that?’”

While many of the leading contenders, like Taylor, are bound by sponsorship deals to wear specific brands on race day, unsponsored athletes such as Jake Riley, who boasts the fifth-fasted qualifying time in the men’s field, are free to run in any approved shoe.

Riley played down rumors that he declined lucrative sponsorship deals to keep his independent status, telling reporters this week, “There was a little interest but not a ton, and so we decided to just keep the options open.”

He plans to wear a pair of the carbon-plated Nikes on Saturday, as he did to compete in the Chicago Marathon in 2019, where he was the top-finishing American.

“The guys I was competing against were also wearing some sort of carbon fiber-plated shoe and I was able to compete against them and feel strong,” Riley said. “It’s more just (about) taking the playing field back to even.”

Jared Ward, a Saucony athlete who placed sixth in Rio, echoed the frustrations of many of his fellow athletes that the shoe debate had become so central to their sport.

“One thing that we’re not talking about with these shoes is some people are responders to them and some people are kind of not,” said Ward. “One big thing we have left to answer in shoe technology is, ‘Can we build a shoe for a specific runner, as opposed to a shoe that’s better on average?’

“I’m excited for shoes to at least calm down enough that we can put the conversation back on the athletes running in the shoes.”

Nike launched a new version of its Alphafly shoe earlier this month that complies with new rules introduced by the governing body that limit the use of carbon plates and sole thickness for elite races.

“We are pleased the Nike Zoom Vaporfly series and Nike Zoom Alphafly NEXT% remain legal,” Nike said at the time. “We will continue our dialogue with World Athletics and the industry on new standards.”

Other shoemakers such as HOKA and Brooks, which boast their own roster of top athletes competing on Saturday, have also embraced the use of carbon plates in some of their models.

Des Linden, the 2018 Boston Marathon winner, will wear a pair of Brooks’ new Hyperion Elite 2 on Saturday as she aims to reach a record third straight Olympic marathon competition.

“I’m confident in the shoes I’ve had and I’ve done it before,” said Linden. “I can’t control what anyone else is wearing.”

Source: REUTERS
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