The coach of China’s Olympic judo champion Tong Wen has blamed pork chops for her positive test for the banned substance Clenbuterol.

Tong, the 78kg category winner in Beijing, has been banned for two years and stripped of her 2009 world title.

But her coach Wu Weifeng believes China’s food safety problems were responsible for the positive test.

“She trained in Europe and was sick of the food so we gave her a lot of pork chops when she came home,” said Wu.

Clenbuterol is used to prevent animals like pigs getting fat, but has been used illegally by athletes to build up muscle.

Tong’s test is the first positive test by a Chinese Olympic champion but China’s top backstroke swimmer Ouyang Kunpeng also blamed pork for his failed test for Clenbuterol before the Beijing Olympics.

He was banned for life despite claiming he had eaten too much roast pork while at a barbecue with friends before the test.

Tong, 27, is China’s most successful judoka with three world titles in her class between 2005-2009.

Chinese sports authorities have warned she could face further disciplinary action, including a four-year ban that could end her dreams of gold in London 2012.

Tong is not the first athlete to have an unusual excuse for failing a drug test.

In 1998, former Olympic bronze medallist Dennis Mitchell was banned for two years by athletics governing body the IAAF after a test showed high levels of testosterone.

Mitchell had originally escaped a ban from USA Track and Field, after claiming that the high levels of the substance were a result of having sex at least four times the night before and drinking five bottles of beer.

But the IAAF did not accept this and overturned the decision to clear Mitchell.

Cyclist Floyd Landis, who was stripped of the 2006 Tour de France title after testing positive for excess levels of testosterone blamed the result on drinking whiskey the night before the test.

BBC

Christine Ohuruogu’s coach has protested his innocence after one of his athletes failed a drugs test.

Lloyd Cowan insists he is shocked that sprint hurdler Callum Priestley tested positive for the banned substance clenbuterol.

‘It is devastating,’ said Cowan, the UK Athletics performance coach who also trains sprinter Simeon Williamson.

‘I am led to believe it may be to do with some contaminated product but I have no idea. I wasn’t there, I don’t know what took place and I am just trying to get through the day.’

Priestley, 21, who won the 60metres hurdles at the British indoor trials last month, has been suspended and had his funding stopped pending a hearing.

He faces a two-year competition suspension and lifetime Olympic ban if the UK Anti-doping charge against him is upheld.

With Ohuruogu, the 400m Olympic champion, having served a year’s suspension in 2006 following three missed drugs tests and Williamson one missed test from a ban, Priestley’s position is the last thing Cowan needed.

The elite coach said: ‘You don’t want to be associated with these sort of things and I’ve got to think that innocence helps the kid.

‘People say “you must know everything” but you can’t know everything with 15 athletes. It’s a shock. It’s hard and, from a coach’s point of view, it is stressful.

‘I have just got to wait for the next two weeks and see what happens. I think that most of his supplements have gone off to be checked.

‘Callum is just stepping on to the pathway to be an athlete and he had showed immense potential. I am worried about him. I tried to call him but he is not picking up.’

Priestley’s case comes less than a month after two young British shot putters, Kieren Kelly and Jamie Stevenson, were charged with a doping offence after refusing an out-of-competition test.

And, on Saturday, convicted drugs cheat Dwain Chambers is likely to grab the limelight when he competes for Britain in the 60m at the World Indoor Championships in Doha.

Clenbuterol was found in a test which Priestley took during a UK Athletics training camp in South Africa in January.

The substance is used in drugs meant for treating asthma but is banned by the World Anti-Doping Agency because it can reduce body fat and aid performance.

‘I am not too sure if he is an asthma sufferer,’ said Cowan, who spent two weeks at the South African training camp.

‘Some athletes think it is a defect so some don’t let you know and some do. I pray to God that he is an asthma sufferer, but I have no idea.’

Cowan claims it is two weeks since he spoke to Priestley, who he trains at the Lee Valley high performance centre near north London with Ohuruogu.

The coach added: ‘There are things that the authorities need to go and find out so I’m going to keep my fingers crossed for him and his family.

‘I’ve just got to keep praying for the boy that things can turn around.

Daily Mail

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