Marina Arzamasova pb 800 Metres 1:57.54 busted
Marina Arzamasova pb 800 Metres 1:57.54 busted
Something wrong with the 800m and women...
Give Melissa Bishop her gold!
Is the women's 800m running event the equivalent of downtown Damascus as a tourist destination?
They came up with a new test that looks for at least four syllables and an "ova" in the surname.
They are basically forcing women to dope if they allow caster and other biological males to compete with biological females.
&&&???? wrote:
They are basically forcing women to dope if they allow caster and other biological males to compete with biological females.
+1
Only way to level the testosterone field
The Nike Androgen Project wrote:
They came up with a new test that looks for at least four syllables and an "ova" in the surname.
lol
2019 2:02.51 Padova (ITA) 16 JUL 2019
2017 2:01.92 Olympic Stadium, London (GBR) 10 AUG 2017
2016 1:58.36 Letzigrund, Zürich (SUI) 01 SEP 2016
2015 1:57.54 National Stadium, Beijing (CHN) 27 AUG 2015
2014 1:58.15 Letzigrund, Zürich (SUI) 16 AUG 2014
2013 1:59.60 Luzhniki, Moskva (RUS) 15 AUG 2013
2012 1:59.63 Montreuil-sous-Bois (FRA) 05 JUN 2012
2011 1:59.30 Brest (BLR) 21 MAY 2011
2010 2:13.77 Minsk (BLR) 14 JUL 2010
Belarus has a miserable doping record. She was 22 when she ran 2:13.77.
She then dropped by 14 seconds the next year. The next key point was when she dropped from the 1:59s to low 1:58 and mid 1:57 in 2014-15. 2015 was the World gold in the 800m. She also has a world indoor bronze, world relay medals and European medals.
Here's a recap of a European gold for Arzamasova in 2014 at the expense of the long-suffering Lynsey Sharp, who was also robbed of numerous medals by xy DSD athletes. Between the dopers and the biological males, hard to medal.
ezby wrote:
Give Melissa Bishop her gold!
From both 2015 and 2016.
I’m surprised. If you listen to the transgender apologists you would think she would be able to run 1:43. They would have you believe the only performance difference between men and women is testosterone.
tgirl wrote:
ezby wrote:
Give Melissa Bishop her gold!
From both 2015 and 2016.
Wow that's true. Melissa Bishop is world champ and Olympic champ. Last woman to achieve this is Maria Mutola in 2000.
Of this list of World 800m medalists, a huge proportion are either intersex athletes or Eastern European dopers:
Women
Championships Gold Silver Bronze
1983 Helsinki--Three Eastern European Dopers
Jarmila Kratochvílová (TCH) Lyubov Gurina (URS) Yekaterina Podkopayeva (URS)
1987 Rome--Three Eastern European Dopers
Wodars and Wachtel were on the same Neubrandenburg club team. There would be plates of vitamins with breakfast that included steroid pills. Guess who was the manager of Katrin Krabbe, triple gold medalist, of the Neubrandenburg club team? Yes, Jos Hermens!!!
https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1991-06-09-tm-820-story.html
Sigrun Wodars (GDR) Christine Wachtel (GDR) Lyubov Gurina (URS)
1991 Tokyo Two Eastern Europeans Dopers and Quirot from Cuba, at the end of its Soviet satellite state period
Liliya Nurutdinova tested positive for stanozolol in 1993 at the World's, where she finished 7th. She also won silver at the 1992 Olympics.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liliya_Nurutdinova
Liliya Nurutdinova (URS) Ana Fidelia Quirot (CUB) Ella Kovacs (ROU)
1993 Stuttgart Likely Intersex gold and two Eastern European dopers
Maria Mutola (MOZ) Lyubov Gurina (RUS) Ella Kovacs (ROU)
1995 Gothenburg Quirot again plus an athlete from middle distance power Surinam (she tested positive for the equivalent of 5 gallons of coffee at the Pan Am games in 2003 and was stripped of her gold) and Holmes, 9 years before her double gold
http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/sport/archives/2003/08/12/2003063386
Ana Fidelia Quirot (CUB) Letitia Vriesde (SUR) Kelly Holmes (GBR)
1997 Athens One Eastern European doper, one Intersex athlete and Quirot from former Soviet satellite Cuba
Ana Fidelia Quirot (CUB) Yelena Afanasyeva (RUS) Maria Mutola (MOZ)
1999 Seville Two Eastern European dopers and an Intersex athlete
No proof on Formanova but her coach was Kratochvilova:
"The biggest surprise of the night came in the women's 800 meters, where Ludmila Formanova of the Czech Republic lunged past pre-race favorites Svetlana Masterkova and Maria Mutola in the final 10 meters to win the gold in a time of 1:56.68. Mutola, a Mozambican, took the silver in 1:56.72 with Masterkova, a Russian, taking the bronze in 1:56.93. Formanova, the reigning world indoor 800 champion, had yet to win a major event outdoors, but her coach Jarmila Kratochvilova won this same event in 1983, the same year she established the world record of 1:53.28 that still stands.
Masterkova, the reigning Olympic champion at 800 and 1,500, said, "Maria and I run the circuit, while Formanova sits home and trains for big races and doesn't care about money." (NY Times)
Ludmila Formanová (CZE) Maria Mutola (MOZ) Svetlana Masterkova (RUS)
2001 Edmonton Vriesde later tested positive and was stripped of a Pan Am medal in 2003, while Mutola was intersex and Graf, who won silver in 2000 and 2001 was suspended in 2010 for blood doping:
"Proceedings were issued against Graf by the Austria's anti-doping authority in May 2010. Following the revelation that the Humanplasma laboratory had aided around 30 athletes with blood doping practices, Graf admitted that her blood had been taken at the lab, but insisted that it had never been re-injected (which would have improved her performances).[1]
In June 2010 Graf was suspended for two years for the attempted use of a prohibited method.[2]"
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stephanie_Graf
Maria Mutola (MOZ) Stephanie Graf (AUT) Letitia Vriesde (SUR)
2003 Saint-Denis Intersex gold for the most dominant 800m runner of the 1990s and early 2000s, while a doping Russian took bronze (pr elsewhere of 1:56.59, primarily a 400m runner who moved up at 29 and won bronze at 30) and Kelly Holmes, subsequent double gold medalist, who ran 1:56.21 at 25 and then 9 years later ran 3:57.9 pr and 1:56.38 near pr at 34! for silver.
Maria Mutola (MOZ) Kelly Holmes (GBR) Natalya Khrushcheleva (RUS)
2005 Helsinki Cuban, Moroccan, Russian. The Russian later tested positive in a re-test for Stanozolol and had her results annulled from 2005-7 only to have CAS unwisely annul the ban as the test came too late.
Zulia Calatayud (CUB) Hasna Benhassi (MAR) Tatyana Andrianova (RUS)
2007 Osaka Kenyan, Moroccan, Spaniard. This was just after Operacion Puerto, where Spain was revealed to be the center of European doping and doping rife throughout their athletes. Kenya was later revealed to be a doping mecca, and we know about Morocco. Jepkosgei was (is?) coached by Claudio Berardelli, a number of whose athletes have tested positive, including Rita Jeptoo and Mathew Kisorio (58:46hm).
https://elpais.com/elpais/2010/12/09/inenglish/1291875644_850210.html
Janeth Jepkosgei (KEN) Hasna Benhassi (MAR) Mayte Martínez (ESP)
2009 Berlin Now we get more XY athletes dominating, the Semenya era begins with two world golds in 2009, 2011, then a hiatus at World's due to testosterone suppression until 2017 where gold and silver goes to xy's.
Caster Semenya (RSA) Janeth Jepkosgei (KEN) Jenny Meadows (GBR)
2011 Daegu
details Caster Semenya (RSA) Janeth Jepkosgei (KEN) Alysia Johnson Montaño (USA)
2013 Moscow Eunice Sum is also coached by Claudio Berardelli
Eunice Sum (KEN) Brenda Martinez (USA) Alysia Johnson Montaño (USA)
2015 Beijing Arzamasova's ban is pending, bronze to Berardelli-coached athlete
Maryna Arzamasova (BLR) Melissa Bishop (CAN) Eunice Sum (KEN)
2017 London Two xy and Wilson, cleared after testing positive for a steroid in her oxtail meal.
Caster Semenya (RSA) Francine Niyonsaba (BDI) Ajeé Wilson (USA)
Hermens' athlete, Katrin Krabbe, the cover girl, then tested positive in 1992 and also had submitted identical urine samples to Grit Breuer and Silke Moller, getting all three banned--subsequently two of them, Breuer and Krabbe, tested positive for clenbuterol (wasn't that Wilson too?).
https://www.upi.com/Archives/1992/08/14/Krabbe-tests-positive-again/4503713764800/
The Nike Androgen Project wrote:
They came up with a new test that looks for at least four syllables and an "ova" in the surname.
Exactly! Is anybody surprised by this?
I saw this this morning it was linked from nbcsports site. The thing that drives me a little bit crazy about this as with 99% of track doping news coverage is that there is no chance NBC would ever report on anything this woman did in athletics positively- up to and including winning an Olympic gold medal. The only possible way she would be mentioned is for breaking the world record or winning multiple Olympic golds. You see this repeated over and over again.
If a person is not newsworthy in a positive light then they should not be newsworthy in a negative light. Noone in general US sporting world cares who this person is no offense and barely anyone even in track cares. So why are we even hearing about it?
Clearly doping offenses can be news but if the presentation of news is only negative all the time and there is never going to be anything said about the actual sport then the doping is not relevant either. The sport just looks tarnished over and over again- I can't really think of another sport like this help me out. Track is big enough to be a doping whipping boy in the news but not big enough to be reported on things like results wins losses athletes and personalities. Doesnt make a lot of sense. Id rather it just not be in the news at all if its not going to be balanced coverage.
It is the internet, everything is news worthy if someone will read it. The evening broadcast news is an antiquated view of limited reporting time and resources.
she should be faster if true wrote:
I’m surprised. If you listen to the transgender apologists you would think she would be able to run 1:43. They would have you believe the only performance difference between men and women is testosterone.
'[T]ransgender apologist'? Are you referring to a non-bigot, who values individuality, and is willing to concede that hetero norms are harmful to some? Or making some acute point about sport? If so, make it.
People in track care about world champions. That's why we're hearing about this.