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Gay, Powell and Simpson fail drug tests

Xinhua)  19:33, July 15, 2013  

Tyson Gay of the U.S. reacts after finishing fourth in the men's 100m final during the London 2012 Olympic Games at the Olympic Stadium in this August 5, 2012 file photo. Track and field was dealt with a huge blow Sunday when the world's top sprinters failed drug tests. They are former world record holder Jamaican Asafa Powell, American champion Tyson Gay and Olympic medalist Sherone Simpson. (Xinhua/Reuter Photos)

WASHINGTON, July 14 (Xinhua) -- Track and field was dealt with a huge blow Sunday when the world's top sprinters failed drug tests.

They are former world record holder Jamaican Asafa Powell, American champion Tyson Gay and Olympic medalist Sherone Simpson.

Powell, 30, was found a stimulant called oxilofrine in his system and his fellow Jamaican Simpson tested positive for the same stimulant.

Powell held the 100-meter record of 9.74 until Usain Bolt beat it in 2008. Simpson won Olympic gold in the women's 400m relay in 2004 and silver in 2012, along with an individual silver in the 100m in 2008.

Both athletes denied knowingly taking the banned substance.

In a statement released through his agent, Powell said, "I assure you that we will find out how this substance passed our rigorous internal checks and balances and design systems to make sure it never happens again."

Gay, who won the 100m and 200m at U.S. nationals last month, failed an out-of-competition test May 16.

The 30-year-old didn't reveal what the banned substance was. He would have his "B" sample tested for a further step.

"I don't have a sabotage story. I don't have any lies. I don't have anything to say to make this seem like it was a mistake or it was on USADA's hands, someone playing games," said Gay.

"The B sample will be processed shortly, and as in all cases all athletes are innocent unless or until proven otherwise through the established legal process, and any attempt to sensationalize or speculate is a disservice to due process, fair play, and to those who love clean sport," announced USADA in a statement.

Gay, three gold medals at 2007 world championships, had signatured himself as a man of "clean competition". He joined USADA "My Victory" program, which encouraged clean competition.

"My career and my name have always been better than medals or records or anything like that. I've always wanted a clean name with anything. Unfortunately, I have to break this news, that I have a positive 'A' sample," said Gay.

The Associated Press quoted four-time Olympic medalist and sprint analyst Ato Boldon as saying that the scandals made it a "difficult day because track and field fans are left not knowing what to believe."

"They took banned drugs!!" a net user BorntoUS10 commented with disappointment on the news on Chinese portal Sina.com. "The good results came from drugs!"

Aside from disillusion, many turned skeptical towards those who stay clean.

"What about other Mr. Cleans and Ms. Cleans?" said a net user with the ID ArrogantWoman, referring to Jamaican multi-Olympic gold medalist Usain Bolt.

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(Editor:LiXiang、Gao Yinan)

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