News & Observer | newsobserver.com | Trevor Graham banned for life

Published: Jul 16, 2008 12:30 AM
Modified: Jul 16, 2008 02:18 AM

Trevor Graham banned for life

Doping agency rules on coach

 

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Track coach Trevor Graham received a lifetime ban from the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency on Tuesday for his role in helping athletes obtain performance-enhancing drugs.

Graham, who lives in Raleigh, has been banned from participating in any event sanctioned by the U.S. Olympic Committee, the IAAF, USA Track and Field or any other group that participates in the World Anti-Doping Agency program.

He was convicted in May of one count of lying to federal investigators about his relationship to an admitted steroids dealer. He's still awaiting sentencing and has asked a judge to toss out his conviction.

He already was banned from all USOC-sponsored facilities and had essentially become a pariah in his sport, connected with too many athletes involved in doping -- Marion Jones and former 100-meter world-record holders Justin Gatlin and Tim Montgomery, to name a few.

"While drug use by athletes is a serious wrong to be addressed with stiff penalties, involvement in doping by a coach is even more reprehensible and must be dealt with through the most severe of all sanctions," USADA CEO Travis Tygart said in a statement. "It is truly disgraceful when a coach uses his position to assist athletes under his care in doping."

It was Graham who anonymously provided a vial of "the clear," a then-undetectable steroid to USADA. At the 2004 Athens Olympics, Graham acknowledged mailing the drug, saying: "I was just a coach doing the right thing at the time." He did not say why he turned in the syringe or how he got the material.

USADA began its case against Graham in November 2006. He was found to have committed four violations of the WADA code:

* Tampering with or attempting to tamper with any part of doping control.

* Possession of prohibited substances and methods.

* Trafficking in any prohibited substance or prohibited method.

* Administration or attempted administration of a prohibited substance or prohibited method to any athlete or assisting, encouraging, aiding, abetting, covering up or any other type of complicity involving an anti-doping rules violation or any attempted violation.

Few of Graham's former athletes are still in track and field. Montgomery, who was banned for life, was sentenced in May to nearly four years in prison for his role in a New York-based check-kiting conspiracy and pleaded guilty July 3 to distributing heroin. Gatlin is serving a four-year doping ban, and Jones is serving a six-month prison sentence for lying to investigators about a check-fraud scam and using steroids.

The most notable survivor is Shawn Crawford, the defending Olympic gold medalist in the 200 meters. Crawford will run the 200 in Beijing and now trains with Bob Kersee, who also coaches sprinter Allyson Felix.

Though Crawford wasn't ever involved in the doping scandal, his name came up because Graham was a key player.

"Whatever he did with anybody else, I'm not worried about it," Crawford said recently. "I know what I did. I can't hold that against a person. People make mistakes."

Graham was the second person from the BALCO scandal to be convicted at trial. Former elite cyclist Tammy Thomas was found guilty in April of lying to a federal grand jury when she denied taking steroids.

Eight others, including Jones and BALCO founder Victor Conte, have pleaded guilty to charges that stemmed from the September 2003 raid on BALCO headquarters in Burlingame, Calif.

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