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``No conscious use of drugs''
NATIONAL athletics selector Adille Sumariwalla rules out the
possibility of conscious drug use in Indian athletics, especially
among the nation's best now at Sydney to compete in the 2000
Olympics. ``Luckily and traditionally, not a single Indian has
tested positive despite taking part in so many Olympic Games and
the Asian Games. Indian athletes returned from the Jakarta Asian
Championships early this month. All winners have been tested,
plus the random testing. So every single person going to Sydney
has been tested by an international body and found clean,'' says
this former India sprinter who competed at the 1980 Moscow
Olympics and is now one of the six national selectors.
``As far as we are concerned there is no issue. But you have to
understand that drug testing regulations are so strong and
difficult that you can slip up. You take some tablet, like what
Aparna Popat took, and can be banned,'' points out Sumariwalla,
who along with former greats G. S. Randhawa, Sriram Singh,
Bahadur Singh, Shiny Wilson and coach J. S. Saini formed the
selectors panel for Sydney. ``Then you can't say the athlete was
on dope. Every single athlete in the Indian team has been
cleared. If something happens between now and Sydney, I don't
think there is anybody stupid enough to get caught, you can't
hold India's athletic programme responsible. If it can happen, I
think it has to be a mistake. I don't think a doctor or a sports
medicine specialist or even the athlete will take a risk like
that.''
``I don't know why we are making an issue out of it. I think the
media is creating an issue which will cause tremendous harm to
Indian sport. By creating this hype and with people like P. T.
Usha saying that athletes are on drugs, will get the
International Amateur Athletics Federation (IAAF) stationed in
India. A situation may arise when any Indian athlete taking
medicine for cough or cold may be randomly tested and then get
thrown out for a positive drug test,'' he points out, even as the
Indian athletes fine-tune their preparations for the Millennium
Olympics at Sydney, where drug checks begin at the airport.
Sumariwalla also denies the possibility of any dilution of
qualifying standards for the Games and points out that India's
24-member contingent, the biggest ever Olympics athletics squad,
appears huge due to the inclusion of three relay teams. ``Seven
men and ten women have qualified in the individual events, so the
squad is not as big as it is made out to be. It is the three
relay teams (women's 4x100m and 4x400m and men's 4x400m) with six
runners each, which make up the numbers,'' he says, pointing out
that the women's 4x400 relay squad and shotputter Shakti Singh
have the potential to advance to the finals in their respective
events.
He also defends the role played by the foreign experts in shaping
up the Indian Olympic squad. Ukrainians Andrey Shurepov (coach
for throws), Yuri Ogordnik (coach for sprints and relay), Dr.
Yuri Boyko (doctor) and Inna Zveryeva (masseur) are the foreign
experts attached to the squad whose services have been
requisitioned by the Amateur Athletic Federation of India (AAFI)
over the last two years. Excerpts from an interview:
Question: India has a big presence at Sydney. Do you think our
athletes are ready to hold their own against international
competition?
Answer: From personal experience, I can tell you that it is not
possible to just get to the Olympic Games and win. The atmosphere
is so different, so charged that it overwhelms you. Therefore I
think it is very important for this large group of athletes who
are among the best in Asia, to be there. Given the right exposure
the Sydney experience will really hold them in good stead in
future. And having watched the trend in track and field after the
1988 Bangkok Asian Games, the rise in standards in India, we are
confident of fielding athletes who can be considered medal
prospects at the Olympics four years from now.
Q: Milkha Singh in the 1960 Rome Olympics and P. T. Usha in the
1984 Los Angeles Games created a flutter by coming within sight
of a medal. Any athlete on the Sydney 2000 squad with similar
potential?
A: I really don't know if we can win a medal or not. But the
women's 4x400m relay team will run the finals, thrower Shakti
Singh win be in the finals, at least eight athletes will finish
in the first 12 and all the rest within the first 20 at Sydney. I
think that is a very good start if you have set your eyes on a
long-term goal to win an Olympic medal from track & field four
years from now.
Q: As one of the national selectors, you have obviously had a
close look at each one of the Olympic probables. Were there any
selection parameters on the basis of which the Sydney squad was
chosen?
A: We set the parameters for selection over a year ago. We set up
qualifying standards which were more stringent than what the IAAF
and the Sydney Olympics Games Committee send us. However looking
at the improvement in performance and a commitment that the
performance will improve at this rate, the selectors decided that
any Indian athlete who achieved the qualifying standards laid
down by the Olympic committee would be sent to Sydney.
Q: India is catching up with the rest of the athletic world by
having foreign experts involved in training and preparations of
our athletes. Did the six-member selection panel consult any of
these Ukrainians coaches/doctors before finalising the squad for
Sydney?
A: As far as the Ukrainian coaches and doctors were concerned, at
each and every selection committee meeting, we called them in for
a full-fledged discussion on each athlete. We tackled it event by
event, for example the Ukrainian coach for throws was consulted
when the Indian throwers were being shortlisted. I think the role
of these Ukrainian experts in preparing the Indian athletes was
tremendous. If it wasn't for their views, many more would have
qualified. We have not taken a single person who has not made the
grade. As far as Indian athletics is concerned, it is very clear
that there has been a rise in the standard and improvement in
performance with the help of the coaches and sports medicine
specialists from Ukraine. It is team work, not the work of one
person.
Q: Indian athletes have been preparing under these foreign
experts for two years now - the major events being the
Commonwealth Games at Kuala Lumpur and Asian Games at Bangkok two
years ago, the last two Asian Track & Field Championships at
Fukuoka and Jakarta respectively and now the 2000 Olympics. Will
the encouraging results and medal hauls extend to Sydney?
A: Expecting an Olympic medal after just two years under
Ukrainian coaches is far-fetched. The women's 4x400m relay squad
will come close to it, Shakti Singh throwing over 20.5m will come
close, anything can happen at that level of competition. It is
not possible to sit here and predict, but it is just not possible
to extend the medal hauls to the Olympics Games.
Q: Two of our brightest prospects - distance- runners Sunita Rani
and middle-distance runner Jyotirmoy Sikdar - will not be running
at Sydney due to injuries, the first due to training overload and
the second perhaps due to wrong treatment. As a selector, do you
share the country's feelings of being cheated of the services of
these two?
A: Let us separate the two. After the Bangkok Asian Games,
Jyotirmoy Sikdar was never going to run. It was very clear
internally, everybody knew. The media hype created is a separate
issue. People close to her knew she was never going to run again.
She could not openly say that she had retired, because then
people would not be giving her the aid.
Sunita Rani got injured, it happens, you can't help it. She was
sent to the World Championships, she was fine and fit. She got
injured after that. I don't see any reason why the selectors
should feel cheated or the country should feel cheated.
NANDAKUMAR MARAR
Mumbai
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