Clean up Jamaica First: Carl Lewis Tells Usain Bolt on Tyson Gay Controversy
Usain Bolt has launched a blistering attack on his 100m sprint rival Gay, claiming the American should have been kicked out of athletics and not a reduced ban for failing dope tests.
- Press Trust of India
- Updated: May 08, 2015 10:37 am IST
Sprint legend Carl Lewis on Thursday waded through the Tyson Gay doping controversy, saying that the reigning Olympic 100m and 200m champion Usain Bolt has raised a "legitimate" issue but he should "clean up his own country first" before talking about others.
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Bolt has launched a blistering attack on his 100m sprint rival Gay, claiming the American should have been kicked out of athletics and not a reduced ban for failing dope tests.
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Gay failed three drugs tests in 2013 after using steroid creams but only received a backdated one-year suspension last year. He was given the reduced penalty because he provided evidence to the US Anti-Doping Agency that led to an eight-year ban for his former coach, Jon Drummond.
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"He (Bolt) has raised a legitimate issue and I understand that but rules are rules. But see a Jamaican is talking about it. Lots of doping issues have come out in Jamaican athletics in the last 4-5 years. He should first think of cleaning up his own house," Lewis told reporters on the sidelines of the Times of India Sports Awards here tonight.
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"Doping is not good for sports. I have said that and I have taken a stand on that in 1987 and in 2008.
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"How many people have taken stand on doping?" he questioned.
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"I you don't take stands on the issue, please shut up," Lewis said apparently asking whether Bolt had taken stand on other doping issues, including that appeared in Jamaica.
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Gay clocked faster times than Bolt last year and will be a serious threat to the Jamaican at the World Championships in Beijing this summer.
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Lewis said the larger issue is how to educate young athletes.
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"I am now coaching a bunch of young athletes at the University of Richmond in US. I want to teach them that taking drugs is not the way to go," he said.
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"The larger issue is to educate youngsters that taking drugs is not going to right direction. Moreover, the US did not win a single gold in sprints in 2012 London Olympics. That should be a concern for the country. Who knows the collegiate students under me win an Olympic gold in future," he said.
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Lewis said that genetics was an important factor in sprints but a billion people in India should produce an Olympic champion.
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"Of course, genes are an important factor but India should have somebody of that gene from among more than one billion people because we are the same species," he said.
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"But I reel India is improving. How many medals India won in 1992 Olympics but you are winning six medals in 2012 London. So Indian sport is improving in last 20 years.
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"Indian athletes should feel confident that they can compete with the best. I feel it is not about lack of hard work but about lack of confidence for Indian athletes," he said.