Sport
Sports Arbitration Court reduces doping ban on Powell, Simpson
Asafa Powell. PHOTO/Getty Images
The Court of Arbitration for Sport has reduced 18-month doping bans for Jamaican sprinters Asafa Powell and Sherone Simpson to 6 months.
Powell, a former world record holder in the 100 meters, and three-time Olympic medalist Simpson tested positive for the banned stimulant oxilofrine at Jamaica’s national trials last year. In April, Jamaica’s anti-doping disciplinary panel suspended the two athletes for 18 months, with the start of the sanctions backdated to June 21, 2013.
“I never felt that I should not have received a sanction. However, I always felt that the 18 months was not in line with a first-time positive test result,” Powell said in a joint statement released with Simpson on Monday.
Simpson said their “actions were not intentional and the CAS has recognized that.”
The CAS announced Monday it had decided to reduce their period of ineligibility to 6 months. That time has already been served. The court heard the appeals in New York over two days earlier this month.
The two athletes had requested that their suspensions be reduced to three months, arguing their offenses were “minor” because it was caused by contamination of the supplement “Epiphany D1” that both of them were taking.
Powell and Simpson have been free to compete since June 18 after CAS granted a stay of the Jamaican panel’s decisions pending the outcome of their doping appeals. The athletes said they would compete Tuesday at a meet in Switzerland “with a renewed sense of excitement and passion.”
