News for You Internet - - Drugs cloud over world swimming championships - you-internet.co.uk

Drugs cloud over world swimming championships

SHANGHAI — A damaging drugs scandal overhangs the world swimming championships in Shanghai, where a misfiring Michael Phelps will try to reignite his Olympic form as the countdown begins to London…


SHANGHAI — A damaging drugs scandal overhangs the world swimming championships in Shanghai, where a misfiring Michael Phelps will try to reignite his Olympic form as the countdown begins to London 2012.Phelps is expected to compete in up to seven events at the purpose-built Oriental Sports Centre on the city's outskirts, a state-of-the-art facility which will host 16 days of swimming, diving and water polo from Saturday.But an unsavoury doping episode has dragged the media spotlight away from the US phenomenon and on to beleaguered Brazilian star Cesar Cielo, whose fate hangs in the balance after testing positive for a banned diuretic.World swimming chiefs appealed after Brazilian officials let the 50m Olympic champion and world record-holder off with just a warning. The Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) has promised to deliver a quick verdict.Cielo, 24, blames a contaminated food supplement for the positive test. But the incident, dubbed "bad for world swimming" by French rival Alain Bernard, is poorly timed for the sport, coming on the eve of its biannual showpiece.Swimming is also desperate to move on from the embarrassing high-tech swimsuits era, when polyurethane-clad athletes set a swathe of super-fast world records which are virtually untouched since the clothing was banned last year.Two years ago in Rome, a staggering 43 world bests fell in scenes of near-farce which badly dented swimming's integrity. In Shanghai, only a handful of new global bests are expected."The 2009 World Championships were a joke with the more than 40 world records," Swimming World Magazine's John Long told AFP."None of that was pure. But we've moved on and the sport is where it should be these days, based on talent and work ethic."Phelps, now 26, managed five golds in Rome, even without a super-suit. But he will be looking to banish some patchy performances as the clock ticks down to London's Olympics next year.The Baltimore Bullet, who tore up the record books with eight gold medals at the 2008 Beijing Olympics, has suf

last modification 2011-07-12 06:45:02

Add comment

Nick
Content