London 2012 retests find 23 athletes testing positive

Results focused on athletes who could potentially take part in Rio this summer

Fireworks over the Olympic Stadium during the London 2012 Olympic Games Opening Ceremony. Photo: Getty Images
Fireworks over the Olympic Stadium during the London 2012 Olympic Games Opening Ceremony. Photo: Getty Images

Twenty-three athletes at the London 2012 Olympic Games, from five different sports and of six different nationalities, tested positive for banned drugs after samples were reanalysed, the International Olympic Committee has announced.

The results, taken from 265 selected doping samples and focused on athletes who could potentially take part at the Rio Games this summer, were all based on intelligence-gathering that began in August 2015, and the IOC said that the reanalysis programme is ongoing, with the possibility of more results in the weeks to come.

All of the athletes, national Olympic Committees and international federations concerned are already being informed, after which the proceedings against the athletes can begin. Any competitor found to have broken the anti-doping rules will be barred from competing at Rio.

“These reanalyses show, once again, our determination in the fight against doping,” said the IOC president Thomas Bach. “We want to keep the dopers away from the Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro. This is why we are acting swiftly now. I have already appointed a disciplinary commission, which has the full power to take all the decisions on behalf of the IOC.”

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The news comes days after Russian state media revealed that 14 of the 31 athletes found to have doped at the 2008 Olympics in Beijing were from Russia. The IOC had announced that the 31 individuals tested positive for banned substances after 454 retrospective urine samples from the Beijing Games were examined. The IOC targeted athletes who were due to compete at Rio, using more advanced testing techniques than were available in 2008.

Speaking before the Games in March 2012, the scientist in charge of drug testing at the London Games claimed that Britain’s reputation for catching dopers would deter potential cheats. “If we end up with more than even half-a-percent I will be surprised, and I hope it is much fewer than that,” said Professor David Cowan, of King’s College London. “Less than 50 athletes and I think that estimate will be on the high side.”

(Guardian service)