Olympics Home
SA News
Inside Track
Outside Track
SA Paralympians
SA Olympians

Calendar of Events

TV Schedule
Sport by sport
Olympic legends
Olympic history
Emotional moments
Sport drugs guide
Olympic venues
1-2-3 Olympics
Galleries
Medals Table
History and Venues
Records
Video Clips
Homepage
South Africa
Africa
World
Sport
Entertainment
Sci-Tech
Traffic
Finance
Backpage
Columnists
 

Shot putter won't return medal

  Related Articles
* Shot putter stripped of gold
* Gold winner fails drugs test

Moscow - Russia's Irina Korzhanenko, who won the Olympic Games shot put before being stripped of her gold after failing a drugs test, insisted on Wednesday that she would not give back her medal.

"It's so sweet to crucify the Olympic champion to prove that the war against doping is going on," she told the Izvestia newspaper.

"I don't believe either the results of the Greek laboratory or the activity of (anti-doping agency) Wada.

"I will not return my gold medal. I won it and I'm Olympic champion. I'm completely sure I did not use any doping."

Korzhanenko said she was innocent and labelled her dope test failure as "political provocation".

The shot putter said she has successfully passed numerous dope tests in the current season, adding she was deeply shocked with the results of the test in Athens.

"I'm an experienced athlete. I have already served a two-year ban, which was a violation of all existing rules," Korzhanenko said.

"I suspect that my failure to pass the test is somebody's mistake or it was done deliberately. I can give a 100%, a 200% guarantee that I did not use any banned drugs."

Korzhanenko also said she demanded the DNA testing of her samples and the samples that contained the banned steroid stanozolol, but her demand was rejected by Wada.

"Earlier this year I received a warning that some provocations were set up against our team in Athens," Korzhanenko said. "I think my case is just a kind of such a provocation."


About News24 | Advertise on News24 | Contact Us | Job opportunities
DIAL 0821 NEWS (0821 6397) to get the latest breaking news by phone.