 T&T men’s sprint relay team, which won bronze in the 2012 London  Olympics, may be upgraded again after the entire US relay team was  stripped of its silver medal yesterday as a result of Tyson Gay’s doping  case, two officials with knowledge of the decision as reported by the  Associated Press. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because  the decision has not yet been announced.
T&T men’s sprint relay team, which won bronze in the 2012 London  Olympics, may be upgraded again after the entire US relay team was  stripped of its silver medal yesterday as a result of Tyson Gay’s doping  case, two officials with knowledge of the decision as reported by the  Associated Press. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because  the decision has not yet been announced.
The International Olympic Committee notified the US Olympic Committee  by letter that the 4x100 relay team has been disqualified and all the  medals withdrawn, the officials said. The letter asks the USOC to  collect the medals and return them to the IOC.
Gay returned his own medal last year after accepting a one-year  doping suspension and the loss of results going back to July 2012, but  the status of the US second-place finish in London and the medals of  Gay’s relay teammates had remained in limbo until now.
President of T&T Olympic Committee (TTOC) Brian Lewis yesterday  said that he has received no official confirmation on the development.
“I haven’t seen a report from the International Olympic Committee  (IOC) but we are looking forward to the official confirmation. We have  to wait on the IOC to do additional deliberation, to confirm whether or  not the silver medal will be reallocated,” said Lewis.
Under international rules, an entire team can be disqualified and stripped of medals because of doping by one member.
Gay was a member of the American team that finished second in London  behind a Jamaican team anchored by Usain Bolt. The Americans set a  national record in the final with a time of 37.04 seconds.
The other US team members losing medals are Trell Kimmons, Justin  Gatlin, Ryan Bailey, Jeffery Demps and Darvis Patton. Kimmons, Gatlin  and Bailey ran in the final with Gay.
It will be a second upgrade for local quartet of Keston Bledman, Marc  Burns, Emmanuel Callender and Richard Thompson, who some three years  ago moved from fourth to third after the Canadian team of Justyn Warner,  Gavin Smellie, Oluseyi Smith and Jared Connaughton, running the third  leg and on the final turn, had taken one step on the lane line, earning  the team an automatic disqualification.
Lewis was adamant about the TTOC joining with the global anti-doping  community, with a clear focus on protecting the clean athlete.
“TTOC has been rigourous in protecting the rights of the clean athlete and this development only highlights the need to do so.”
Gatlin, who is in Qatar for the opening Diamond League meet of the  season tomorrow, told AP that he was not aware of the decision and had  no comment. Gatlin, who won the 100-meter gold medal at the 2004 Athens  Games, served a four-year doping ban from 2006.
Gay tested positive for steroids at the US championships in 2013. He  received a reduced suspension—rather than a two-year ban— because he  cooperated with the US Anti-Doping Agency’s investigation that led to an  eight-year ban for his former coach, Jon Drummond.
Gay’s results were annulled going back to July 15, 2012, the date when he first used a product containing a banned substance.
If the London medals are reallocated, the silver will go to T&T,  who finished third in 38.12 seconds. The bronze would go to the French  team which placed fourth in 38.16 seconds.
“Our athletes were denied the opportunity or moreso the glory to  stand on the podium and receive the silver medal. This latest  development strengthens the unwavering effort of the TTOC in protecting  the rights of the clean athlete,” said Lewis.
The rules of track and field’s world governing body, the  International Association of Athletics Federations, mandated that the  entire US team be disqualified, but the final decision was up to the  IOC.
Drummond was the coach of the US relay team in London and placed Gay  on the team. According to the USADA decision in Drummond’s case, the  athlete took a banned substance in July 2012 with the coach’s knowledge.
The IOC has previously stripped US relay teams of medals  retroactively for doping, including three teams from the 2000 Sydney  Olympics.
The US was stripped of gold in the women’s 4x400 and bronze in the  4x100 following Marion Jones’ admission of doping. Jones returned her  medals, but her teammates appealed to the Court of Arbitration for Sport  to keep theirs and won their case in 2010. The court said IAAF rules at  the time did not allow entire teams to be disqualified because of  doping by one athlete.
The IOC also stripped the US men’s 4x400 relay of their Sydney gold after a doping admission by Antonio Pettigrew.
In 2012, American runner Crystal Cox was stripped of her gold medal  from the 4x400 relay at the 2004 Athens Olympics after admitting to  doping. The IOC did not disqualify the rest of the team because it was  unclear which rules were in effect at the time.
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