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- - - - - - - - - - - - Sept. 25, 2000 | On a day when two huge stars -- American Michael Johnson and Australian Cathy Freeman -- both won gold in the 400-meter race, the Games were suddenly plunged into scandal, with positive drug tests smearing the reputations of the Games' cutest champion and the husband of its most-hyped star. Sixteen-year-old Romanian gymnast Andreea Raducan, who took gold medals in both the team and the all-around competition, apparently showed "positive signs" of the banned stimulant ephedrine. The Romanian team has filed a protest, and it wasn't immediately clear what would happen to the 4-foot-10 Raducan -- or her medals. Besides her two golds, she also won a silver medal in the vault. The scandal threatens to destroy Romania's remarkable gymnastics success in the Games, which included a sweep of the women's three all-around medals. One grim upside for the American team: If Romania is forced to default, the fourth-place U.S. team will be awarded the bronze, which would become the only medal won by American gymnasts.
Hunter and 1988 U.S. Olympians That report immediately prompted another searing accusation, by the head of the International Olympic Committee's medical commission, who accused -- a mere 12 years after the fact -- U.S. track and field officials of covering up five positive drug tests before the 1988 Olympics in Seoul, South Korea. Oddly, commission head Prince Alexandre de Merode could not remember who any of the athletes were. "It's possible they were winners. I know it wasn't just anyone," he said. Hmm. The U.S. Olympic Committee, however, pointed out that the case involved eight U.S. track athletes who tested positive for traces of ephedrine, contained in a nutritional supplement called Super Charge and nonprescription cold remedies. The eight athletes have never been specifically identified.
Lots of finger-pointing NBC did little but bolster Van Dyken's scurrilous charges when host Bob Costas, during the broadcast's Saturday night show, followed Van Dyken's sniveling allegations with a warning to viewers that many of the athletes competing in the Games are probably using drugs and will never get caught. Sure, Bob, and there are probably honest athletes who get defamed on international television for nothing but great performances. Last week, Costas also, with no discernible evidence, raised the possibility that French runner/privacy nut Marie-Jose Perec -- who left the Games and returned to France after a bizarre story of being harassed in her hotel room -- had actually left the Games because she feared failing a drug test. Maybe a fat libel suit would wise that guy up.
Johnson, Freeman breeze When Johnson and Maurice Greene (who won the 100 meters Saturday) pulled up lame in the 200-meter final at the U.S. trials (after trash-talking each other for months), one of the year's most exciting -- and, it seems, one of track's only -- face-offs was lost. Instead, both men won easily in Sydney, and their only showdown will be between their publicists after the Games as they compete for post-Olympics endorsements. Australian star Cathy Freeman also won big in the 400 meters Monday (49.11), an even bigger victory for Australia than the swimming medals produced by favorite son Ian Thorpe. Freeman, who lighted the Olympic flame during the opening ceremonies, is an Aborigine who has frequently been central to conversations about the racial divide in Australia. In 1994, after winning the 400 meters in the Commonwealth Games, she wrapped herself in the Aboriginal flag, and a major race row erupted. And recently she took the Australian government to task for its refusal to apologize for the "stolen generation," Aboriginal children forcibly removed from their families.
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