Hamburg - Five-time Olympic speed skating champion Claudia
Pechstein of Germany has been banned for two years by the ruling body
ISU for blood doping.
The ISU said on its website on Friday it found Pechstein guilty of
'the prohibited method of blood doping' from evidence gathered
through the 37-year-old's blood profile, and not a positive test.
Pechstein is Germany's most successful Winter Olympian ever with
nine medals overall (five of them gold) 1992-2006. She is also a
six-time world champion and has 25 minor medals from the worlds.
The ISU said its decision was 'based on the evidence of Ms
Pechstein's profile which included abnormal values and abnormal
changes of values in a series of tests (in particular in the tests
conducted during the Essent ISU World Allround Championships held in
Hamar on February 7-8, 2009).'
Pechstein was banned from February 9, 2009, until February 8,
2011, after the completion of a hearing on Monday and Tuesday.
Pechstein withdrew from the Hamar worlds after two of four events,
stating a fever. She did not compete again in the season.
As a result, she will miss the 2010 Olympics in Vancouver, and,
given her age, may end her career.
Pechstein's lawyer, Simon Bergmann, said that Pechstein and the
German speed skating federation will appeal the ruling before the
Court of Arbitration for Sport.
'There is no positive result, she was found guilty without a
positive doping test,' said Bergmann.
Bergmann's office said in a statement that the charges were based
on allegedly elevated values of reticulocytes (immature red blood
cells). The statement said that experts told the ISU hearing that the
elevated values were not necessarily the result of doping.
Germany speed skating supremo Gerd Heinze said: 'This is very
tragic, but not the end yet.'
Pechstein's last title was the European allround crown in January
in Heerenveen, Netherlands.
The ISU said it has used a blood screening programme since 1999
and has conducted some 11,000 tests among 1,650 skaters.
The hematological passport, similar to that now also used in
cycling and other sports, can detect suspicious values which then
result in further target tests.
Under new World Anti-Doping Code rules introduced on January 1,
2009, such findings can be used to establish a doping offence.
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