Popov, Klim medals are returned to coach
By JACQUELIN MAGNAY
Tuesday 3 April 200
Gold medals won by Alexander Popov and Michael Klim were yesterday
recovered from a Canberra
dam, where they had been dumped by thieves who had stolen a safe from swimming
coach Gennadi Touretski. Touretski's safe, which contained an
Olympic 100metres freestyle gold medal won by Popov at the
Atlanta Games, Klim's Kuala Lumpur Commonwealth Games 4x200 meters relay
gold medal and a Seoul Olympic 50metres freestyle bronze medal of Russian
swimmer Gennadi Prigoda, was found floating in Dunlop pond late yesterday.
Papers, passports and jewellery, including a rare gold watch given to
Touretski on his 50th birthday by Popov, were still missing. "We
are not sure if the thieves developed a conscience or if they thought the medals
were worthless," a police spokesperson said. Thieves had broken
into Touretski's home in the Canberra suburb of Bruce on Sunday, when he was
returning from the Australian championships in Hobart. "These medals
are a sign of the relationship between me and the athletes and a sign of their
success - it is like a religious thing for me, a sentimental and emotional
tie," Touretski said. Popov had given Touretski the Atlanta medal to
thank his coach after he won the 50m and 100m freestyle double for the
second successive Olympics. Klim gave Touretski his Commonwealth gold medal
when the Touretski-coached 4x200 metres medley relay team smashed the world
record, previously held by a Soviet Union team also coached by Touretski.
Swimming coach's drug shock
DRUG ALLEGATION
By JACQUELIN
MAGNAY
and DARREN GRAY
CANBERRA
Wednesday 11 April 2001
Two-hundred-and-fifty athletes at the Australian Institute
of Sport in Canberra will be drug-tested
by the end of the week after sensational drugs allegations
were laid against AIS swimming coach Gennadi Touretski yesterday.
Touretski has been summonsed to appear in the ACT Magistrates' Court after the
illegal anabolic steroid stanozolol - the
same drug for which Canadian sprinter Ben Johnson was banned in 1988 - was allegedly
found in his possession. It is believed
the drugs were found in Touretski's personal safe, along with Olympic and
Commonwealth Games gold medals, which had been stolen
from his Canberra home. They were
recovered from park lake several kilometres away last
week. Sources have told The Age that fewer than
10 tablets were found. Touretski, 51, coaches some of the world's fastest swimmers,
including Australia's Olympic gold medallist
Michael Klim and five-time Russian Olympic champion Alexandre Popov. He has
been suspended from the Australian team
for this year's world championships in Japan and suspended on full pay from
his AIS job. The Russian-born coach has
told AIS executive director Mark Peters that he was not involved in any
wrongdoing. His lawyer, Jason Parkinson, said Touretski
had refused to be interviewed by police until he
was supplied with full details of the alleged offence. Mr Parkinson read a statement
drawing
attention to the burglary from Touretski's home. "Police
allege the thieves later forced open the safe and
then dumped it in a pond," he said. Touretski
will face Canberra Magistrates Court on Thursday on a charge under the Poisons
and Drugs Act, which carries a maximum penalty
of six months. Sports officials were keen to distance athletes from the furore,
saying that widespread drug testing undertaken
by the Australian Sports Drug Agency showed that Australia's athletes were clean.
But the blanket drug testing of all athletes
started on Friday as soon as the Australian Sports Drug Agency was notified
by police of their find. Popov was tested
three days ago and Klim was tested two days ago. Both swimmers would not
comment yesterday but Klim's father, Wotek Klim, said:
"My son has nothing to do with this matter, Michael
cannot comment because he doesn't have anything to do with this. This is a big
shock, we have to find out what has happened
and the matter is under investigation, but Michael has not taken
drugs." The agency's
chief executive, John Mendoza, said: "At this stage, there is absolutely no
evidence to prove any association between
the alleged find and the AIS swim squad itself." He described the
anabolic steroid in question as well-known and "readily
detectable". He said no Australian swimmer had
tested positive to a banned substance since a small and inadvertent offence
in 1998. Questioned about the furore, Prime Minister John Howard said: "We will
continue to have a very strong line on drugs
in sport." Australian Swimming executive director Vena Murray said Australia's
swimmers would be unfairly tainted by association. She said that Touretski would
face a life ban if any drugs allegations were proved.
"Possession of drugs is treated as the equivalent of trafficking." Touretski
also coaches Australians Sarah Ryan, David Jenkins, Ray Haas and Antony Matkovich.
He was in charge of Australia's world-beating
men's freestyle relays at the Olympics.
Michael Klim, King of the Pool!
A radical guru of the pool
By JACQUELIN MAGNAY
CANBERRA
Wednesday 11 April 2001
Click on the picture below to E-mail me!
. .
Click Back to go to My Michael Klim WebSite