Subway, again another good reason for not speaking about you don't know.
When, and where, I admitted to have involvement with blood transfusion in 1980 ?
At that time, in Italy, I was the head coach of multiple events, and I had nothing to do with middle distances. However, since in my Club I was the coach of several athletes of middle distances and marathon (and for that reason in 1987 I became the head coach of Marathon for women, and after two years the responsible of all the Italian middle distance and marathon, together with Luciano Gigliotti), I knew what happened in Italy before I had this role, and of course I knew what happened when I was the responsible.
So, I know (for direct admission of their coaches) that the athletes using autologous blood transfusion were Cova, the Selvaggio twins, Scartezzini, Gerbi, Fontanella (men), and Dorio and Possamai for women. At the same time, I know who refused this practice : Panetta, Mei, Bordin, and for women Gargano and Cruciata. And also I know that everybody didn't continue this procedure when officially autologous blood transfusion was considered out of law (and after quitting this practice, Antibo improved dramatically winning two European titles in 1990, and the silver medal in Olympics 1988).
The fact that I had the opportunity to know what happened before my official role as head coach of middle and long distances doesn't mean I was involved in something that happened BEFORE I was named in that role. And, in any case, when in Italy there was the autologous blood transfusion, the practice was legally permitted.
About Nicholas Kemboi, the IAAF did a big mistake, mixing the record of one (1'46"65 and 3'56"19 in Mile) with the activity of the other, increasing the level of the mistake giving to Nicholas Kiptanui Kemboi a PB of 1'47"38 (his real PB was 1'46"65) and to Nicholas Kemboi a PB on Mile of 3'56"19 when Nicholas never ran a mile in his life.
So, I understand your mistake, but the same mistake is not possible for people following the Kenyan athletics at that time, in spite of the mistakes of IAAF. This shows only that you didn't follow the Kenyan athletics of that year, and from this fact we have the following question : "Why you continue to speak about something that you didn't follow, therefore didn't know ?".