Author Topic: News: The Greek Doping Scandal  (Read 13437 times)

Offline Chris Ⓐ LeRoux

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"Show me the government that does not infringe upon anyone's rights, and I will no longer call myself an anarchist." ~Jacob Halbrooks

Offline Chris Ⓐ LeRoux

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Re: News: The Greek Doping Scandal
« Reply #89 on: Jun 29, 2008, 08:34 AM »
Quote
Miracles will not happen, but we can have a good participation.  Just going to Beijing is a success in itself, and I would like to thank everyone who helped make this possible,” he added.

Wish they had that attitude BEFORE they were busted systematically cheating the system! It rings pretty hollow now, especially since they won't give up the slots they cheated to get!
"Show me the government that does not infringe upon anyone's rights, and I will no longer call myself an anarchist." ~Jacob Halbrooks

Offline Dave Almeida

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Re: News: The Greek Doping Scandal
« Reply #90 on: Jul 11, 2008, 11:25 PM »
http://www.reuters.com/article/reutersComService_2_MOLT/idUSL111423862008071

Greek sprinter tests positive for steroid
By Barney Spender

ATHENS (Reuters) - Greek sprinter Dimitris Regas has tested positive for the steroid methyltrienolone, according to a statement from the Greek Athletics Federation (SEGAS).

"We express our regret because yet another doping incident is plaguing Greek sport," said the statement on its website ( www.segas.gr ).

The 21-year-old, who tested positive at the national championships in Athens last month, has denied using drugs.

"I never thought it necessary to use banned substances because my only goal in sport was to make my parents and everyone who believed in me proud," he said in a written statement.

Regas, who was not a member of the Greek team for the forthcoming Beijing Olympics, said he would be taking legal action.

It is the latest drugs scandal to hit Greek sport.

Earlier this year, 11 members of the national weightlifting team tested positive and since then the swimmer Yiannis Drymonakos and rower Yiannis Tsamis, both likely medal contenders in Beijing, have also tested positive and will miss the Olympics.

Four years ago, Greek sprinters Costos Kenteris and Katerina Thanou both missed the Athens Games after they failed to take doping tests as requested by the IOC.










Same country, same use of the most dangerous steroid available. Greeks don't seem too bright. If weightlifting is ever kicked out of the olympics, track and field should be right next to it.

Offline Chris Ⓐ LeRoux

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Re: News: The Greek Doping Scandal
« Reply #91 on: Jul 24, 2008, 11:47 AM »
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Doping-Another Greek weightlifter tests positive
By Barney Spender, Editing by Ken Ferris

ATHENS, July 24 (Reuters) - Another Greek weightlifter has tested positive for a banned substance, the Greek Weightlifting Federation said in a statement on Thursday.

The name of the athlete, who is not a member of the four-member Olympic team going to Beijing, will not be released until the results of the second sample are known.

"In a doping test on July 9 there was a positive sample not by a member of the Olympic squad at the Beijing Games," said a federation statement.

"The second sample will be requested and from then on the governing board of the weightlifting federation will follow legal procedures.

"The federation restates its clear opposition to any form of doping. We will continue with checks until the elimination of doping from this historic sport."

Eleven members of the national team tested positive in March for the anabolic steroid methyltrienolone, causing the resignation of national coach Christos Iakovou.

Greece has also lost swimmer Yiannis Drymonakos and rower Yiannis Tsamis from its Olympic team for doping offenses while one of its three boxers, yet to be named, has tested positive.
"Show me the government that does not infringe upon anyone's rights, and I will no longer call myself an anarchist." ~Jacob Halbrooks

Offline Matt Erdman

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Re: News: The Greek Doping Scandal
« Reply #92 on: Jul 24, 2008, 01:59 PM »
Wow, that was really dumb.
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Offline Chris Ⓐ LeRoux

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Re: News: The Greek Doping Scandal
« Reply #93 on: Jul 30, 2008, 07:33 PM »
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Four years after Athens Greeks have Olympics blues

ATHENS (AFP) — A world of fans and an army of critics are counting the days before China's long-awaited launch of the Beijing Olympics on August 8 but for previous hosts Athens, Games' indifference is the rule.

A lingering hangover from the 2004 Olympics, low medal expectations in Beijing and a spate of demoralising doping scandals in recent months have combined to sap interest in the event, observers say.

"I doubt many Greeks would know when the Games start in Beijing if we asked them," says Thomas Gerakis, a pollster at opinion company Marc SA.

"It makes sense that spirits are lower this time round," says Serafeim Kotrotsos, the former spokesman of the Athens 2004 organising committee who now works for Greek daily Eleftheros Typos.

"These are not our Games...and the recent doping cases have cooled interest among the Greek public," he told AFP.

Another Athens Olympics insider, who spoke on condition of anonymity, argued that Greeks had a "Games overdose" in 2004, when the agony of last-minute preparations and daily bickering among organisers was replaced by intense pride over a widely acclaimed Olympics and 16 medals won by Greek athletes.

"Greeks were swept with enthusiasm in 2004 but four years later they have other things to worry about," he said. "Like whether they have enough money to go on holiday."

Greek medal expectations are low this year with only triple-jumper Hrysopiyi Devetzi, the men's basketball and waterpolo teams and judoka Ilias Iliadis eyeing a podium finish.

For years, Greek fans had been accustomed to medal hauls from athletics and weightlifting where a "Dream Team" of strongmen had brought home an astonishing 12 medals, five of them gold, in the last four Olympics.

But Greek weightlifting spectacularly fell from grace in April when nearly the entire Beijing squad was eliminated after testing positive to the banned steroid Methyltrienolone.

Worse still, the architect of over a decade of Greek success, coach Christos Iakovou, was disgraced and prosecuted as the mastermind behind the importation of illegal substances given to the athletes.

Within three months, swimmer Yiannis Drymonakos and sprinter Dimitris Regas had also tested positive for the same steroid while an unidentified Greek Olympic boxer also fell foul of testing two weeks ago.

Drymonakos' ousting was a heavy blow to Greece's medal hopes as the 24-year-old had broken the European 200m butterfly record in March.

Not only was Greek sport tainted by the recurring drug cheat finds but yet another doping controversy -- the four-year saga of Greek sprinter Katerina Thanou dating from the Athens Games -- was also in the news this month.

Having served a two-year suspension for missing three doping tests prior to the 2004 Games, Thanou last week made known her intention to compete in Beijing after narrowly meeting the qualification requirements in mid-July.

But her decision reopened a debate within the International Olympic Committee, which feels it has unfinished business with the Greek sprinter and will decide this weekend on whether to permit her participation.

Four years after the Games, the Greeks are also still grappling with the bricks-and-mortar legacy of 15 sports and media sites built for the competition.

A handful were remodified for concerts and sports events, but most have seen only sporadic use and several have been under lock and key since the Games.

A judo hall that cost over 80 million euros to build is still in disuse as authorities ponder how to turn it into an arts academy, while a 50-million-euro weightlifting hall will now be turned into university accommodation.

Hellenic Olympic Properties, the state company that manages the Olympic venues portfolio, says most other facilities have now been leased to private investors and will see use as leisure and shopping centres.

"This is the graceless period when the tenders are over and the investors are trying to obtain operation permits," company chairman Constantinos Mattalas told AFP, arguing that several facilities should be open by next summer.

The leases have lessened the drain on Greek public finances, reducing the annual cost of venue upkeep to around 20 million euros from 100 million three years ago.

Mattalas declined to give exact figures on how much cash the leases bring in but insists it covers venue maintenance and the company's own expenses.

The Athens 2004 Games cost around 13 billion euros, including an estimated one billion euros spent on securing the first Olympics held after the Al-Qaeda attacks on the United States in September 2001.
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Offline Chris Ⓐ LeRoux

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Re: News: The Greek Doping Scandal
« Reply #94 on: Sep 25, 2008, 11:42 AM »
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Greek sprinter testifies in doping probe

ATHENS, Greece: One of three Greek sprinters found doping before the Beijing Olympics testified Thursday at a Greek inquiry into drug violations.

Dimitris Regas, a 400-meter runner, gave evidence to Athens prosecutor Costas Simitzoglou, judicial officials said.

Fifteen Greek athletes, including Regas, tested positive for the steroid methyltrienolone this year, including 11 members of the Greek weightlifting team and one swimmer.

Regas tested positive during Olympic trials, while two other sprinters — Fani Halkia, the 2004 Olympic 400-meter hurdles gold medalist, and fellow sprinter Tassos Gousis — were expelled from the Greek Olympic team for allegedly using the same banned substance.

Judicial officials said Halkia and Gousis are both due to testify next week after prosecutors interview an International Olympic Committee official involved in the disciplinary decision against Halkia.
"Show me the government that does not infringe upon anyone's rights, and I will no longer call myself an anarchist." ~Jacob Halbrooks

Offline Chris Ⓐ LeRoux

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Re: News: The Greek Doping Scandal
« Reply #95 on: Apr 29, 2009, 09:32 PM »
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Two-year bans for doped Greek weightlifters

ATHENS: Two Greek lifters have received two-year bans after testing positive in anti-doping controls last year, the country’s weightlifting federation announced on Wednesday. Giorgos Papadopoulos and Christina Filandrianou failed tests following their participation in the domestic Special Athletes Championships, the federation said. The federation added that one other weightlifter had tested positive at the European Championships in Poland last March, not revealing the name of the athlete until the results of a second test were examined.
"Show me the government that does not infringe upon anyone's rights, and I will no longer call myself an anarchist." ~Jacob Halbrooks