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
 

Rowers stripped of bronze

  Related Articles
* Shot putter won't return medal
* Discus champ in disgrace
* Weightlifter stripped of medal

Athens - The Ukrainian four-woman rowing team was stripped of their bronze medal on Thursday after one member tested positive for a banned drug, an IOC source said.

It was the fourth medal lost because of doping during the Athens Olympics.

A weightlifter from Hungary also was expelled from the Games on Thursday for failing to provide a urine sample after his event, said the International Olympic Committee source, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Zoltan Kovacs, who finished last in the 105kg class, became the 10th weightlifter punished for doping.

Three medals have been stripped in the last four days because of doping violations. Hungary's Robert Fazekas lost his gold in the discus and Russian Irina Korzhanenko lost her gold in shot put.

The latest case involved a rower who evidently was unaware that she was taking a banned substance, the IOC source said.

Olena Olefirenko was part of Ukraine's four-woman crew that finished third in lightweight sculls on Sunday. Australia finished fourth and will now get the bronze. Germany won the gold and Britain took the silver.

Olefirenko got medication from a team doctor that contained a stimulant that is banned, the source said.

Olefirenko reported that she took the drug when she was tested after the race, but didn't realise it was banned, the source said.

If one member of a rowing crew fails a drug test, the entire crew loses the medal.


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