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Teammate likely to appeal doping ruling that cost Bolt gold

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Jamaica’s Nesta Carter (L) and Usain Bolt celebrating after winning the men’s 4×100m relay final at the “Bird’s Nest” National Stadium during the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games.
The International Olympic Committee said on January 25, 2017 it had stripped Jamaica of their gold medal earned in the 4x100m relay at the 2008 Beijing Games after Nesta Carter was caught doping.The decision which follows the retesting of hundreds of samples from the Beijing event, means teammate Usain Bolt loses one of the three gold medals he won at that Olympics. Carter was found to have tested positive for banned substance Methylhexanamine.
/ AFP PHOTO / Olivier MORIN

Jamaican Olympic officials are likely to appeal the doping sanction of relay runner Nesta Carter that has cost Usain Bolt one of his nine Olympic gold medals.

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Carter failed a drugs test in a retest of a sample from the 2008 Beijing Games, testing positive for the banned substance Methylhexaneamine.

The International Olympic Committee (IOC) announced on Wednesday that it had stripped Jamaica of the 4x100m relay gold won in Beijing.

Jamaica Olympic Association (JOA) president Michael Fennell and an attorney representing Carter indicated there will be an appeal, most likely to the Court of Arbitration for Sports (CAS).

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“We have to decide what the best legal process is,” Fennell said after the JOA met with Carter’s representatives on Wednesday night. “It is a team and we are interested in ensuring they are properly protected and given a fair chance of clearing their names.”

Carter’s lawyer and executive members of his local club MVP also said on Wednesday they wanted to fight the decision.

Carter ran the lead-off leg on a team that included Michael Frater, Bolt and Asafa Powell that crossed the line first.

The loss of the relay gold deprives Bolt of one of his “triple-triples” — he won gold in the 100m, 200m and 4x100m at Beijing and repeated the feat in London in 2012 and again in Rio last year.

A CAS spokesperson told AFP on Thursday they had not heard from Carter or his representatives.

An appeal must be filed by February 15, 21 days after Wednesday’s announcement of the decision by the IOC.

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